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  • Origin Storage 10:44 on 29/07/2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,   

    Sun, Sand, Sea and Security Survey 2011 

    Work obsessed Brits abroad – 73% of workers check emails whilst on holiday
    And a further 62% admit their boss expects to be in touch with them whilst enjoying the summer sun.

    London (UK), July 2011: Bags packed, flights booked and foreign currency in their pockets. The workforce might be jetting off but they’re definitely not leaving the daily grind behind. Instead –according to a survey conducted by the secure storage specialist Origin Storage – of 1,000 office workers in the City of London, a whopping 73% of workers will check in with the office, whilst on holiday. The results also show that over 50% of those planning a summer break abroad will remain in contact with the office every day to ensure things stay on track during their absence, by checking email accounts and text. Of this group, 32% check their emails more than once a day and if you’re the boss, it seems you never truly rest as 83% admitted that they will be in touch with their offices throughout their entire vacation.

    Key Highlights :

    • 73% of workers phone, text or email their places of work during their holiday of which 54% will check emails at least once a day and 32% more  than once a day!
    • 41% take mobile devices on holiday for work purposes
    • 62% expect their employers to contact them whilst away on holiday
    • 44% of respondents feel that being contactable gives them job security
    • 51% of laptops are left totally unsecured without even a password for protection
    • Only 26% of these laptops will be encrypted

    Paranoid or Laid Back – which are you?
    We are divided. 39% of our sample group felt less stressed after checking emails whilst another 39% admitted checking their emails would leave them more stressed.
    22% are undecided.

    Over 50% of respondents have no security on laptops at all!
    In a worrying new statistic, 51% of those storing work on their laptops are doing so without any security whatsoever with not even a password for protection! Let’s hope they’re not left behind at the airport, in a café or on the beach.

    From the horse’s mouth:
    Jane, City PA from Harpenden:”My director feels he can contact me at any time for the most inane of queries, ‘Where is the contacts folder?’ or ‘What time did you book me on my flight to Geneva?’ and I feel it’s an invasion of my privacy. I was even called off the beach by the hotel reception because my mobile was not picking up signal so my boss called the hotel directly.”
    Mike, CEO from Barnes: “I absolutely expect to contact my staff when on holiday. If they don’t want the job, there are thousands who do. Myself included, can we really afford not to work all the hours in this economic climate? I think not. I know I feel better knowing that things are ticking over nicely whilst I’m away so I don’t come back to an unmanageable workload.”
    Speaking on these results, Andy Cordial, MD of Origin Storage concludes, “We seem to have changed to a nation of workaholics. Only 23% (a jump from the survey conducted just 8 months ago from 35%) of our respondents have no contact whatsoever with work during their holiday which puts them firmly in the minority. Although on the surface this may seem like a good trend, especially for cash struck organisations, we deal with the aftermath from these industrious workers when company secrets have gone AWOL. The reality is that when corporate information is accessed from a mobile device, whether it’s personal or company owned, and it’s misplaced there are consequences”.

    Cordial continues, “Who is to blame? Is it the employee who just can’t let go or the employer for making them feel that they have to be accessible in the first place? Regardless of why it’s happening, our advice to the corporate world is: if you expect to contact your staff while away then it is down to you to secure their devices. Especially as the Information Commissioner’s Office are under pressure to flex its muscle and fine up to £500K for data breaches. Take the opportunity to re-evaluate your security – especially of your mobile devices, and perhaps invest in some holiday insurance of your own.”

    This survey was carried out amongst 1000 city workers by interviewing them at London Bridge and Monument station commuter platforms during July 2011

     
  • Origin Storage 10:53 on 12/07/2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Want to know more about NAS? Come and see our NAS and iSCSI Demonstration 

    Have you been looking around for network storage, and the thought of investing in a new device without testing it first has put you off ……We have now comissioned a testing suite of Thecus devices so that we can all the questions you may have .
    Thecus N16000 Demo Suite - now available to book
    Test scenarios include:
    Dual Redundancy
    High Availabilty
    iSCSI Stacking
    Large Single volume 80TB+
    Performance Tests
    Test unit specifications:
    2 x Thecus N16000 (16 x 3TB SATA = 48TB)
    1 x Thecus N16000 (4 x 600GB SAS = 1.8TB) & (3 x 3TB SATA)
    1 x Cisco 4900M 10GbE Network Switch
    1 x Dell Poweredge R210, 4GB DDR, Intel Xeon 2.4Ghz, Windows Server 2008 R2 64Bit
    4 x C10GT 10GbE PCI-E NIC (SPF+ Direct Copper)
    Thecus N16000 Specification
    Intel Xeon X3480 Processor
    8GB DDR3 SDRAM
    Max Capacity 48TB
    HBA Controller supports 6.0Gbpa SAS/SATA
    Redundent PSU 700W
    Supports iSCSI 3
     
  • Origin Storage 17:16 on 09/07/2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    SSD price fall welcomed 

     

    News that a 512 gigabyte SSD (solid state drive) has fallen in price to under a thousand dollars in the US has been welcomed by Andy Cordial, managing director of Origin Storage.
    Acording to Cordial – who heads the secure storage systems product company – pricing has always been perceived as something of an obstacle to the adoption of SSDs and – while solid state drives attract a premium over magnetic hard drives – the advantages are significant.”We are now starting to see corporates adopting SSDs for the operating system, basic programs and critical systems data, alongside a larger magnetic hard drive for data storage. This gives companies the advantage of rapid boot up times and, interestingly enough, by moving the SSD to a read-only setting, higher levels of security against system problems,” he said.”By storing the customised set-up files for a PC on the magnetic main drive, even if the worst happens and the main drive is trashed by malware, the IT department can simply swap the magnetic drive out and, with no appreciable configuration changes, the SSD will boot the PC up as normal,” he added.

    The Origin Storage MD went on to say that the real advantage of SSDs to a company with several hundred PCs is the time saving in terms of bootup time.

    If, for example, a company uses a 32 or 64GB SSD on employee’s office PC for the operating system plus program data, and only stores data on the magnetic drive – securely backing up that data into the cloud every evening – the machine’s bootup time each morning is a lot faster than if a single magnetic drive were to be used, he said.

    There are also good energy savings to be had, says Cordial – by powering down each employee’s computer each evening, rather than leaving them running through the night and at weekends, as many companies do to save on maintenance costs.

    With SSDs, he adds, there are no problems with stop-start cycles that you get with magnetic drives. And with the latest cloud technology, it also becomes possible to use just a 32 or 64 GB SSD drive on an office PC for the OS and programs, and then store the rest of the data wholly in the cloud.

    “This is what Google’s upcoming Chrome OS is all about – better speed and efficiency, and a reduced need for processor power on the local desktop or notebook PC. The days of magnetic drives are far from being numbered, but the price breakthrough now being seen with 512 GB SSDs is also starting to push the prices of smaller capacity SSDs in the right direction,” he said.

    “The price depression effect is slow but steady, but I think that we will see more and more corporates moving on up to the benefits that SSDs now offer. We have already seen an increase in demand for SSD products from Dell for notebooks and netbooks. And that’s no bad thing on several fronts, not least in terms of the energy saving possibilities,” he added

     
  • Origin Storage 17:01 on 01/07/2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Apple Mac OS Lion, , External USB,   

    Apple Mac now features native support for encrypted drives 

    The upcoming Apple Mac OS Lion operating system will incorporate a number of useful security features.

    “The FileVault 2 feature is a very welcome addition to the new Mac operating system, especially with support for external USB and Firewire drives. This is really good news,” said Andy Cordial, Origin’s managing director. “The addition of an instant wipe facility is also to be welcomed. With large drives, the wiping of data – especially on a remote basis in the event of device loss – takes a finite period of time. By removing the encryption keys, the remote wipe is effectively as near-instant as you are going to get,” he added.

    According to Cordial, ever since he and his team started banging the encrypted drive drum some three years ago, customers have welcomed the availability of well-priced full disk encryption technology. This has been the reason, he explained, why the kits – which provide PC users with all the essentials they need to upgrade a PC’s existing drive to an encrypted unit, including a transfer cable and software – have been hot sellers.

    This enthusiasm for encrypted data was also felt, says the Origin Storage managing director, at this year’s Infosecurity Europe show, when Cordial and his team were showing off their Datalocker 3 range of multi-security factor portable encrypted drives. The trend towards encrypted drives was highlighted, he says, by a survey conducted amongst show-goers by our colleagues over at DigitalPersona, who found that two-third of survey respondents at Infosecurity Europe 2011 held disk encryption as a key IT priority.

    The survey took in responses from more than 360 attendees at the show, and found that whilst large enterprises may have the resources to implement effective and comprehensive disk encryption on all devices, smaller organisations have traditionally reported difficulty finding encryption that is affordable and easy to implement.

    And this, of course, he adds, is where Origin’s Datalocker 3 series enters the frame, offering companies of all sizes access to high-capacity and secure portable storage with encryption technology that is further secured by a 6 to 32-digit alphanumeric passphrase that is entered directly on the device itself.

    “With features that include a USB 3.0 interface for fast data transfers and support for Apple Macs, Windows and Linux platforms, the Datalocker 3 secures data using 256-bit AES encryption and comes in capacities of up to one terabyte,” he said.

    “This all-round flexibility makes it ideal for those companies that use Apple Macs with the new Lion operating system, and, of course, the drives will also plug into regular PCs on a hot-swap basis,” he added. “It’s really good to see that our positive stance on encrypted drives over the last three years being mirrored by the industry, especially with the Apple Mac now featuring native support for encrypted drives.”

     
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