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When It Absolutely Positively Has To Get Back |
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It happens to all of us. Just minutes after Fedex leaves the lobby, you get a call from your legal department informing you that they made a few more changes to the big sales contract. Or the beta software you've sent out has a new patch--and an additional DVD?
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The Digital Breakwater (Redux) |
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The growth of the "digital tsunami" or the "data tsunami" is still a very much a hot topic. At the Techonomy conference in Lake Tahoe, Google CEO Eric Schmidt made waves (pun intended) when he said that "There was 5 exabytes of information created between the dawn of civilization through 2003, but that much information is now created every 2 days, and the pace is increasing...People aren't ready for the technology revolution that's going to happen to them."
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Something for Nothing |
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They say you can't get something for nothing, but it's not true. "How's that?" you ask.
When it comes to managed file transfer or "MFT", transferring large files inside the network is fairly straightforward; almost a no-brainer. Sending large files outside the network can be more of a challenge--especially if the recipient needs to preregister or install a plug-in. With Safe-T, no plug-in is required... but we've already covered this territory.
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Managed File Transfer and the "Subservient Chicken" |
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The other day a friend at a biotech company asked me how Safe-T differed from other managed file transfer solutions. While I talked a lot about flexibility and extensibility, I couldn't find a nice analogy... until now. And it's Burger King's Subservient Chicken.
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A Digital Breakwater for the Digital Tsunami |
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In the recently released report, The Digital Universe Decade - Are You Ready?, the IDC delivers some "shock and awe" about the size of the digital universe, i.e., the amount of digital information in the world. In 2009, they "calculated" it to be 800,000 petabytes or 800,000 million gigabytes. That's the equivalent of a stack of DVDs reaching from the earth to the moon and back (!).
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