Justin is founder and principal analyst at PivotNine. He covers enterprise IT, cloud, and information security.
Data protection vendor Veeam has announced it will offer, for the first time, a first-party Backup-as-a-Service product. Called Cirrus by Veeam, it protects data in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Azure.
“We’ve spoken to our largest [partners], and initially, obviously, there’s hesitation but they’ve come to fully embrace it much like the hyperscale cloud offerings where they’re reselling,” said Danny Allen, chief technology officer at Veeam.“We believe that there’s a major part for the local VCSPs to play simply because they understand the local regulations and regulatory requirements of the industry,” he said. “They have relationships with the customer, so we’re not cutting them out.
“They’re coming directly to Veeam because we have brand recognition, and they’re saying we want this directly from you,” says Allen. “They’re either very large enterprises saying ‘You run this for us’ or, on the lower end of the market, there are people that we don’t even talk to.” Breaking down the 16 million Veeam Backup 365 customers provides interesting insights into customer thinking. Veeam has around 10 million customers that currently self-manage Veeam Backup 365. 5 million have Veeam Backup 365 deployed on-site and another 5 million deploy Veeam Backup 365 in the cloud, but manage it themselves. The remaining 6 million use Veeam cloud service providers to obtain Veeam Backup 365 as a managed service.
日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し
Similar News:他のニュース ソースから収集した、これに似たニュース記事を読むこともできます。
Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix announces Arizona's first seminary programThe Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix is opening a full seminary, offering the opportunity for men to study to become priests, for the very first time in Arizona.
続きを読む »
Discovery+ Ad-Free Tier Announces First Price IncreaseStarting today, it's $8.99 to watch Discovery's streaming content without ads—but there's good news if you don't mind a few commercial breaks.
続きを読む »
Nintendo Switch Will Still Get First-Party Games Through Early 2025Nintendo plans to continue supporting the console, but what does that mean for Switch 2?
続きを読む »
Dr. Melissa Gilliam will lead Boston University as school's first Black and first female presidentThe university's board of trustees announced Gilliam, 58, will begin steering the university as its 11th president next July. Previously, the career educator had spent the past two years working as the executive vice president and provost at Ohio State.
続きを読む »