Following up on details from the last post (Every Small Business Has Two Locations), let's look at some ways to access your data whether you're in the office, home, or on the road with Internet access.
Notice I didn't say “access your network†but rather access your data. One great way to share data with yourself in different locations and with coworkers is to store it online somewhere. Using any number of SaaS (Software as a Service) vendors allows you to save some or all of your work data on secure servers run by companies specializing in collaboration services. Since no “collaboration†companies can seem to break through into mainstream success, let's call this “group online storage†or “online workspaces†instead.
Simply put, these services create kind of a “Shared Documents†space on a hosted service, much like you can do with your Windows computer. And, of course, you can have your private “My Documents†space as well. Many offer both, because every worker in a team needs private document folders as well as access to group folders.
Once you're signed up with a service, you store you documents online, and you can access the service and your files through any browser. Some services also allow you to map a drive from your desktop to your online storage folders.
I've used a service called HyperOffice for a couple of years, and they offer private and shared folders and the mapped-drive desktop link. Like few other services, HyperOffice goes much further and offers a customizable portal page, e-mail, calendars, contacts, task list, notes, reminders, and a few other goodies. You can use HyperOffice to replace Microsoft Windows Exchange servers and still keep e-mail, shared calendars, task lists, and other Outlook features without the expense of an in-house Exchange server.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
- mburton325
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