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This Exotic Particle Had an Out-of-Body Experience These Surprised Scientists Took a Picture of It – SciTechDaily

Artists illustration of ghost particles moving through a quantum spin liquid. Credit: Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab

An unexpected finding by scientists at Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley could advance quantum computers and high-temperature superconductors.

Scientists have taken the clearest picture yet of electronic particles that make up a mysterious magnetic state called a quantum spin liquid (QSL).

The achievement could facilitate the development of superfast quantum computers and energy-efficient superconductors.

The scientists are the first to capture an image of how electrons in a QSL decompose into spin-like particles called spinons and charge-like particles called chargons.

Artists illustration of ghost particles moving through a quantum spin liquid. Credit: Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab

Other studies have seen various footprints of this phenomenon, but we have an actual picture of the state in which the spinon lives. This is something new, said study leader Mike Crommie, a senior faculty scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and physics professor at UC.

Spinons are like ghost particles. They are like the Big Foot of quantum physics people say that theyve seen them, but its hard to prove that they exist, said co-author Sung-Kwan Mo, a staff scientist at Berkeley Labs Advanced Light Source. With our method weve provided some of the best evidence to date.

In a QSL, spinons freely move about carrying heat and spin but no electrical charge. To detect them, most researchers have relied on techniques that look for their heat signatures.

Now, as reported in the journal Nature Physics, Crommie, Mo, and their research teams have demonstrated how to characterize spinons in QSLs by directly imaging how they are distributed in a material.

Schematic of the triangular spin lattice and star-of-David charge density wave pattern in a monolayer of tantalum diselenide. Each star consists of 13 tantalum atoms. Localized spins are represented by a blue arrow at the star center. The wavefunction of the localized electrons is represented by gray shading. Credit: Mike Crommie et al./Berkeley Lab

To begin the study, Mos group at Berkeley Labs Advanced Light Source (ALS) grew single-layer samples of tantalum diselenide (1T-TaSe2) that are only three-atoms thick. This material is part of a class of materials called transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs). The researchers in Mos team are experts in molecular beam epitaxy, a technique for synthesizing atomically thin TMDC crystals from their constituent elements.

Mos team then characterized the thin films through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, a technique that uses X-rays generated at the ALS.

Scanning tunneling microscopy image of a tantalum diselenide sample that is just 3 atoms thick. Credit: Mike Crommie et al./Berkeley Lab

Using a microscopy technique called scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), researchers in the Crommie lab including co-first authors Wei Ruan, a postdoctoral fellow at the time, and Yi Chen, then a UC Berkeley graduate student injected electrons from a metal needle into the tantalum diselenide TMDC sample.

Images gathered by scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) an imaging technique that measures how particles arrange themselves at a particular energy revealed something quite unexpected: a layer of mysterious waves having wavelengths larger than one nanometer (1 billionth of a meter) blanketing the materials surface.

The long wavelengths we saw didnt correspond to any known behavior of the crystal, Crommie said. We scratched our heads for a long time. What could cause such long wavelength modulations in the crystal? We ruled out the conventional explanations one by one. Little did we know that this was the signature of spinon ghost particles.

With help from a theoretical collaborator at MIT, the researchers realized that when an electron is injected into a QSL from the tip of an STM, it breaks apart into two different particles inside the QSL spinons (also known as ghost particles) and chargons. This is due to the peculiar way in which spin and charge in a QSL collectively interact with each other. The spinon ghost particles end up separately carrying the spin while the chargons separately bear the electrical charge.

Illustration of an electron breaking apart into spinon ghost particles and chargons inside a quantum spin liquid. Credit: Mike Crommie et al./Berkeley Lab

In the current study, STM/STS images show that the chargons freeze in place, forming what scientists call a star-of-David charge-density-wave. Meanwhile, the spinons undergo an out-of-body experience as they separate from the immobilized chargons and move freely through the material, Crommie said. This is unusual since in a conventional material, electrons carry both the spin and charge combined into one particle as they move about, he explained. They dont usually break apart in this funny way.

Crommie added that QSLs might one day form the basis of robust quantum bits (qubits) used for quantum computing. In conventional computing a bit encodes information either as a zero or a one, but a qubit can hold both zero and one at the same time, thus potentially speeding up certain types of calculations. Understanding how spinons and chargons behave in QSLs could help advance research in this area of next-gen computing.

Another motivation for understanding the inner workings of QSLs is that they have been predicted to be a precursor to exotic superconductivity. Crommie plans to test that prediction with Mos help at the ALS.

Part of the beauty of this topic is that all the complex interactions within a QSL somehow combine to form a simple ghost particle that just bounces around inside the crystal, he said. Seeing this behavior was pretty surprising, especially since we werent even looking for it.

Reference: Evidence for quantum spin liquid behaviour in single-layer 1T-TaSe2 from scanning tunnelling microscopy by Wei Ruan, Yi Chen, Shujie Tang, Jinwoong Hwang, Hsin-Zon Tsai, Ryan L. Lee, Meng Wu, Hyejin Ryu, Salman Kahn, Franklin Liou, Caihong Jia, Andrew Aikawa, Choongyu Hwang, Feng Wang, Yongseong Choi, Steven G. Louie, Patrick A. Lee, Zhi-Xun Shen, Sung-Kwan Mo & Michael F. Crommie, 19 August 2021, Nature Physics.DOI: 10.1038/s41567-021-01321-0

Researchers from SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory; Stanford University; Argonne National Laboratory; the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai Tech University, Shenzhen University, Henan University of China; and the Korea Institute of Science and Technology and Pusan National University of Korea contributed to this study. (Co-first author Wei Ruan is now an assistant professor of physics at Fudan University in China; co-first author Yi Chen is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Quantum Nanoscience, Institute for Basic Science of Korea.)

This work was supported by the DOE Office of Science, and used resources at Berkeley Labs Advanced Light Source and Argonne National Laboratorys Advanced Photon Source. The Advanced Light Source and Advanced Photon Source are DOE Office of Science user facilities.

Additional support was provided by the National Science Foundation.

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This Exotic Particle Had an Out-of-Body Experience These Surprised Scientists Took a Picture of It - SciTechDaily

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Cloud storage deal: Get 2TB of storage with end-to-end encryption for only $10 – ZDNet

StackCommerce

With the frequency and severity of cyber threats increasing practically by the day, it's become more important than ever to put strong measures in place to protect your privacy and your most confidential data. The most effective way to do this is to protect yourself online with an excellent VPN, and protect the files on your computer with encrypted cloud storage such as Internxt Drive offers. Since both of those services are ridiculously inexpensive, there is no excuse for leaving you and your data vulnerable.

The Internxt - 2TB Decentralized Cloud Storage: 1-Year Subscription that is currently available for just $9.99 offers zero-knowledge decentralized cloud storage with end-to-end encryption that provides uncompromising security. It encrypts your uploaded files and then divides them into fragments on your end so that you're the only one with the decryption key that is required to retrieve them.

However, in spite of its complex power, Internxt is very easy to use. The user interface is quite intuitive and the service is convenient to access. An app is available for all of your devices, including desktop and browser, as well as Android and iOS mobile devices.

Also, while your files are supremely protected, sharing them is still a simple matter. Internxt Drive users can share their data over other cloud storage services such as Dropbox, Google Drive, Apple iCloud, and Microsoft OneDrive. That makes it easy for teams to privately collaborate with customized features and user-to-user solutions.

If you want truly private and secure cloud storage, it's hard to beat what Internxt offers, especially when you can get a year's subscription at a discount. As TechRadar notes: "Unlike popular cloud storage services like Google Drive, Dropbox, and Microsoft OneDrive, Internxt is a zero-knowledge file storage service that supports end-to-end encryption."

Don't pass up this chance to enjoy the peace of mind that a vast amount of high-security storage can offer. Get Internxt - 2TB Decentralized Cloud Storage: 1-Year Subscription while it's on sale for just $9.99, instead of the normal price of $126.

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Cloud storage deal: Get 2TB of storage with end-to-end encryption for only $10 - ZDNet

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Playbook, which aims to be the Dropbox for designers, raises $4M in round led by Founders Fund – TechCrunch

When Jessica Ko was head of design at Google and then Opendoor, she realized that her teams spent about 90% of their time digging around Dropbox looking for assets.

In many cases, theyd find older versions. Or they couldnt find what they were looking for. Or even worse, theyd accidentally pick the wrong asset.

It was such a chaotic process, Ko recalls. Anyone could go in and alter things and change folder structures around. It was a total mess, and just continued like that because there was no alternative.

As Opendoor grew in size, the problem became an even bigger one, she said.

Designers were quitting because it was giving them so much anxiety, Ko recalls. Dropbox hadnt solved it yet. Google Drive was not a good alternative either. Designers deal with files the most, and were exchanging files constantly.

Besides the frustration and stress the problem of file storage and sharing caused, not being able to locate the correct assets also led to errors, which in turn led to lots of money lost, according to Ko.

We spent a lot of money on photo shoots because we couldnt find new things, or people would have to recreate designs, she said.

On top of that, she said, designers werent the only ones who needed to access the assets. Finance teams were constantly needing them for things like creating pitch decks.

So in 2018, Ko left Opendoor to set about solving the problem she was tired of dealing with by creating file storage for modern design workflows and processes. Or put more simply, she wanted to build a new kind of cloud storage that would serve as an alternative to Dropbox and Google Drive built by, and for, creatives.

In early 2020, Ko (CEO) teamed up with Alex Zirbel (CTO) to launch San Francisco-based Playbook, which she describes as the Dropbox for designers, to tackle the challenge. And today, the startup has emerged from stealth and announced it has raised $4 million in a seed funding round led by Founders Fund at a $20 million post-money valuation.

Other investors in the round include Abstract, Inovia, Maple, Basis Set, Backend, Wilson Sonsini and a number of angels, including Opendoor co-founder and CEO Eric Wu, Gusto co-founder Eddie Kim and SV Angels Beth Turner.

In a nutshell, Playbook claims it can automatically imports, tags, categorizes an organizations entire media library, in minutes.

When starting out, the first thing Playbook set out to do was attempt to reinvent the way folders exist for assets, with subfolders underneath. And then, the company set about trying to change the way people share files.

Since so much is done over email and Slack these days, version control becomes even more difficult, Ko told TechCrunch. So Playbook, she said, has built a storage system that can be accessed by all parties as opposed to just sending files via different channels.

For years, these assets have been dropped into what feels like a file cabinet, Ko said. But these days, sharing assets is much more collaborative and theres different kinds of parties involved such as freelancers and contractors. So who is managing these files, and controlling the versions has become very complex.

Playbook offers 4TB of free storage, which Ko says is 266 times the free version of Google Storage and 2,000 times that of Dropbox. The hope is that this encourages users to use its platform as an all-around creative hub without worrying about running out of storage space. It also automatically scans, organizes and tags files and has worked to make it easier to browse files and folders visually.

Image Credits: Playbook

In March, Playbook opened a beta version of its product to the design community and got about 1,000 users in two months. People continued to sign up and the company at one point had to close the beta so that it could manage all the new users.

Today, it has about 10,000 users signed up in beta. Early users include individual freelancers to design teams at companies like Fast, Folx and Literati.

The nine-person company wants to focus on getting the product right before attempting to monetize and launch to enterprises (which will likely happen next year), Ko said.

For now, Playbook is focused on the needs of freelancers. The company believes that the exponential growth of freelancers post-pandemic means cloud storage needs to be smarter.

We want to first solve that use case, and unlock the problem from the bottom up, Ko told TechCrunch.

Also, another strategy behind that initial focus is that freelancers can also introduce Playbook to the companies and enterprises they work for, so the marketing then becomes built into the product.

They can transfer assets and files through Playbook to their clients, who tend to adopt, she said.

Today, Playbook is helping manage over 3.2 million assets and says it has hundreds of waitlist sign-ups every month.

Looking ahead, Zirbel said the startup wants to branch out into image scanning, similarity, content detection, previewing and long-term cloud storage and tons of integrations.

There are lots of interesting technology challenges when you focus on the creative side of cloud storage, he said.

Founders Funds John Luttig said when the firm first met Ko and Zirbel last year, it was clear that they had a depth of understanding and thoughtfulness around file management that his firm hadnt seen before. Plus, in his view, there has been very little innovation in cloud storage since Dropbox launched in 2007.

The product leverages modern design, collaboration principles, and artificial intelligence to make file management much faster and easier, he wrote via email. Given their design-centric backgrounds, theyre extremely well-positioned to rethink the user experience for file systems from the ground up.

Playbook, he said, is able to leverage recent advancements in computer vision and design to build a far better product to manage and share files.

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Playbook, which aims to be the Dropbox for designers, raises $4M in round led by Founders Fund - TechCrunch

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Secure your data in the cloud with two-factor authentication – The Dallas Morning News

A reader named Herb emailed today with one simple question: Just read of someone stealing info from iCloud. Is it safe?

I sent Herb a quick response, but then I decided that its time for a refresher about cloud security.

There are no guarantees when it comes to online security, but as more of our lives and documents and financial dealings are happening online, it behooves us to do all we can to keep that data safe.

This might include occasionally changing your passwords and not reusing passwords on multiple sites (Im guilty of this).

There are also varying levels of security. Whenever we talk about cloud storage, from services like Apples iCloud, Googles Drive or Microsofts OneDrive (and others), I immediately think of what type of things Im choosing to store in the cloud.

We rely on those big companies to keep our data safe, and to do that we need to take advantage of all the safeguards they offer.

Besides a strong, unique password, the best thing you can do is take advantage of two-factor authentication (2FA).

With 2FA enabled on a service like iCloud, youll be asked to register your cellphone number.

From then on, when you log in to access iCloud documents or services, youll need your Apple ID and the password, and Apple will send a message to your phone with a six-digit code. You have to enter that code to complete the login.

So now your account is doubly protected because a would-be hacker needs your Apple ID, your password and your phone to receive the code.

I think thats a pretty safe system.

You need to enroll in 2FA for all your online services. Some companies, like Apple, really push you into setting up 2FA. For others, you may need to dig around in your account settings to find it.

Ive set up 2FA everywhere I can, especially where I have files stored or perform financial transactions.

Every service has a slightly different way of going about 2FA, so be sure to read all the fine print before you choose to enroll.

For instance, Apple users who enable 2FA only have two weeks to change their mind and turn it off if they dont like it.

You really should take an afternoon to go through your online accounts, change passwords and look into enabling security measures that are available.

I know Im overdue to review mine.

If you would like to read more about 2FA from Apple, Google and Microsoft, see the links below.

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204915

https://www.google.com/landing/2step/

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/account-billing/how-to-use-two-step-verification-with-your-microsoft-account-c7910146-672f-01e9-50a0-93b4585e7eb4

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Migrating to the cloud is the top priority for most firms – ITProPortal

The amount of unstructured data harvested by enterprises is growing fast, forcing organizations to improve their data management strategies and move deeper into the cloud.

This is according to a new report from data management firm Komprise, based on a poll of 320 IT and storage professionals, which states that more than half (56 percent) are now prioritizing moving more unstructured data to the cloud.

This makes sense, given that almost two-thirds (63 percent) already manage more than 1PB of data, and spend almost a third (30 percent) of their IT budgets on storage and backup. Whats more, they expect the cost of storage and backup to rise this year.

Simply buying more storage is not a feasible strategy, the report adds, as the figures quickly add up and can burn through budgets. Instead, businesses need to be smart about their data management strategy.

A hybrid approach emerges as a solid solution, Kompromise claims. Half of the businesses store data in a mix of both on-prem and cloud-based solutions, and expect to spend more than half of their IT budgets on cloud data storage in the next 24 months.

As costs rise and visibility remains low, businesses are looking to create systematic policies for data management (56 percent), and to further invest in analytics tools (45 percent), the report concludes.

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Migrating to the cloud is the top priority for most firms - ITProPortal

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Cloud Storage Software Market Will Raise Beyond Imagination over Period 2025 | Microsoft, Oracle, Rackspace Hosting, Red Hat, IBM UNLV The Rebel Yell…

Global Cloud Storage Software Market Analysis to 2025 is a specialized and in-depth study of the Cloud Storage Software industry with a focus on the global market trend. The research report on Cloud Storage Software Market provides comprehensive analysis on market status and development pattern, including types, applications, rising technology and region. Cloud Storage Software Market report covers the present and past market scenarios, market development patterns, and is likely to proceed with a continuing development over the forecast period. A number of analysis tools such as SWOT analysis and Porters five forces analysis have been employed to provide an accurate understanding of this market.

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Some of the key players of Cloud Storage Software Market:

The Global Cloud Storage Software Market research report offers an in-depth analysis of the global market, providing relevant information for the new market entrants or well-established players. Some of the key strategies employed by leading key players operating in the market and their impact analysis have been included in this research report.

Segmentation by Solution:

The report provides a detailed overview of the industry including both qualitative and quantitative information. It provides overview and forecast of the global Cloud Storage Software market based on product and application. It also provides market size and forecast till 2025 for overall Cloud Storage Software market with respect to five major regions, namely; North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific (APAC), Middle East and Africa (MEA) and South America (SAM), which is later sub-segmented by respective countries and segments.

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The report evaluates market dynamics effecting the market during the forecast period i.e., drivers, restraints, opportunities, and future trend and provides exhaustive PEST analysis for all five regions.

Fundamentals of Table of Content:

1 Report Overview1.1 Study Scope1.2 Key Market Segments1.3 Players Covered1.4 Market Analysis by Type1.5 Market by Application1.6 Study Objectives1.7 Years Considered

2 Global Growth Trends2.1 Cloud Storage Software Market Size2.2 Cloud Storage Software Growth Trends by Regions2.3 Industry Trends

3 Market Share by Key Players3.1 Cloud Storage Software Market Size by Manufacturers3.2 Cloud Storage Software Key Players Head office and Area Served3.3 Key Players Cloud Storage Software Product/Solution/Service3.4 Date of Enter into Cloud Storage Software Market3.5 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion Plans

4 Breakdown Data by Product4.1 Global Cloud Storage Software Sales by Product4.2 Global Cloud Storage Software Revenue by Product4.3 Cloud Storage Software Price by Product

5 Breakdown Data by End User5.1 Overview5.2 Global Cloud Storage Software Breakdown Data by End User

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Cloud Storage Software Market Will Raise Beyond Imagination over Period 2025 | Microsoft, Oracle, Rackspace Hosting, Red Hat, IBM UNLV The Rebel Yell...

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Glass Lewis backs one of Starboard’s three nominees in Box proxy fight – Reuters

NEW YORK, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis on Friday recommended that investors in cloud storage vendor Box elect one of Starboard Value's three proposed nominees to the board, arguing change is needed after a "puzzling" capital raise and "reactive governance" changes.

Glass Lewis is backing Peter Feld, a partner at Starboard, owner of an 8.4 stake in Box (BOX.N), to join the 10-person board. "We believe there remains sufficient cause to support the election of a direct shareholder representative at this time," Glass Lewis wrote in its report, which was seen by Reuters.

The report criticizes Box's board for having supported a $500 million convertible preferred offering led by private equity firm KKR (KKR.N), calling it a "puzzling, poorly received and underutilized capital raise."

For Starboard, the KKR deal has become the centerpiece of its broader criticism that Box has a poor track record of being a public company and has failed to deliver on its commitments in spite of its strong product positioning. Starboard has also told the board that it should fire Chief Executive Aaron Levie and find a buyer for the company.

This year's campaign marks the second time in two years that Starboard, one of the industry's busiest activists with a history of winning more board seats than its rivals, has taken aim at Box.

The hedge fund reached a settlement with the company in March 2020 that allowed it to choose one director and have input in choosing a second. Both of those directors have assumed leadership roles on the board.

Starboard did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for Box said the report ignores "that Peter Feld has been insistent on firing Boxs CEO in the absence of a sale, demonstrating his unwillingness to be open minded."

Glass Lewis and its larger rival Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) are often instrumental in determining the outcome of boardroom battles over who sits on a board by making recommendations that many big investors like mutual funds follow.

ISS issued its report earlier this week and came to a different conclusion, recommending that investors back the company's nominees instead, not Starboard's directors. While ISS says that Starboard deserves credit for operational and governance changes made since last year's settlement, it also adds that the current board deserves more time to allow its changes to take hold.

Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Steve Orlofsky

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Cloud disaster recovery: The devil is in the detail – ComputerWeekly.com

While disaster recovery is potentially one of the lowest-hanging of fruits when it comes to cloud use cases, its not as straightforward as all that.

Now, cloud DR sounds simple enough. You backup or otherwise copy data off to the cloud, and when disaster strikes you spin servers up and run things there until your datacentres are operational again.

But, not all scenarios are as simple as that and cloud DR isnt a universally deployed solution. There seem to be a few reasonable concerns over how easy it actually is, centred on networking and security.

Here we look at some of the complexities of cloud disaster recovery and some general guidelines to address them.

The reality is that failing over to the cloud and failing back may not be quite as simple as it sounds.

Servers may, for example, go down on site then failover to the cloud. But it could be the case that not all servers are affected and failover. Some may remain working at on-premise locations while some are now in the cloud.

So, connectivity requirement might be split between datacentres and cloud(s), with access needed to some existing and some re-hosted servers, and also including from remote workers. And thats just failover. Failing back to a production configuration might be fraught with similar issues.

A recent Veeam survey found that 39% of 1,277 IT department respondents organisations were configured to use cloud infrastructure at a secondary site.

A further 40% use cloud storage to store data but would restore to an on-site location in case of disaster.

One-fifth, (19%) do not use any cloud service as part of their DR strategy.

When Veeam asked how those questioned used the cloud for disaster recovery the answers showed a divergence between locations and methods of restoring data and recovering servers, with permutations spanning the original location, a cloud, or alternate datacentres locations.

Of those asked (1,007), 40% can mount to data in the cloud and run compute from on-site locations. For a quarter (25%) data may reside in the cloud but needs to be brought back on-site to be of use to applications.

Just less than that (22%) can recover servers in the cloud, but networking is a manual process. Only 12% can fully recover in the cloud.

When the survey asked how failover and failback was executed, half of those questioned (50%) said they used written scripts to connect resources running remotely. But 34% said they would have to reconfigure users manually during failover/failback.

The Veeam survey found that more than half (54%) of the 1,007 questioned put network configuration top of the challenges in cloud disaster recovery. Also, 47% cited connectivity for users in on-site locations and 42% for those remotely working as key challenges.

The types of thing that can be a challenge here are repointing external and internal DNS settings, connecting email and remote access. Simply having to re-configure can be a fairly major task. Whats also important is making sure you have the documentation and access rights including passwords, for example to do so and that these are not locked away in systems inaccessible during an outage. Ensuring all that is prepared for and tested is a key task in disaster recovery planning.

Cloud DR security and compliance were also a big concern. One fifth of the respondents to the Veeam survey (20%) said they thought the cloud not secure enough or that compliance would be an issue. Often cloud and as-a-service providers are responsible for system availability and underlying infrastructure protecting and managing business data belongs to the customer.

The aforementioned DNS setup can cause potential security weaknesses, for example, if such network details are left unsecured against intruders in potentially vulnerable phases of failover and restore.

Disaster recovery failover and restore scenarios can vary significantly. In the mix you can get partial failures and failovers, and partial restores, with a mix or on-site, cloud and remote sites to re-connect.

So, planning for the unknown is a case of brainstorming all the likely results of an outage and its effects on existing and secondary resources, with the likely topology of resulting scenarios envisaged.

That takes care of the most general level of things. Within that you will need to map out all the likely resulting issues of access, connectivity and security that will need to be addressed.

Hopefully, much of the preparedness required can be automated and should be tested for, in various permutations, and updated to match any changes in the infrastructure.

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Cloud disaster recovery: The devil is in the detail - ComputerWeekly.com

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Picture This: A Free Alternative To Google Photos – Warwick Beacon

(NAPSI)If youre like most Americans, you have hundreds, perhaps thousands, of photos and videos stored on your phone, computer, tablet and so on. They bring back memories of happy times, loved ones, important occasions and beautiful places and youd hate to lose them just because your computer dies or your phone gets lost. Thats where cloud storage comes in. All cloud storage solutions on the market provide a basic set of services. That includes a specific amount of storage space, easy access to files and the ability to share files with other users.

The Problem

One of the main differentiators among these products is the amount of free storage space they provide.

Google Photos, for instance, had long been loved for its unlimited free storage. Now, however, any photos you upload will eat into the 15GB of space on your Google account shared with your Gmail and Google Drive. And once that space is used up, youll need to pay $29.99 a year if you want to upgrade to 200GB.

Some Solutions

Fortunately for consumers, a variety of new cloud storage products have entered the market. Microsofts OneDrive and Dropbox are familiar names and now theres a promising new product that might be the best free cloud storage provider youve never heard of.

Called TeraBox, it provides users with 1TB (1024GB) of free storage space permanently, with no catch. Its also fully compatible with Android, iOS, and desktop computers. And it can sync your files seamlessly across your devices.

1TB of free space is equivalent to carrying around a high-capacity hard drive on you at all times. That amount of space can store hundreds of thousands of photos, or thousands of high-quality videos.

Cost Comparisons

Dropbox offers only 2GB of free space. To upgrade to 1TB, youll need to pay $9.99 per month. OneDrive fares only a bit better, offering 5GB of space free. A subscription fee of $1.99 per month will buy you a mere 100GB of extra space. TeraBox may well be the only cloud storage solution to offer 1TB of space, free.

If you find that 1TB of free space isnt enough, you can upgrade to 2TB for $2.99 per month. Google Drive also offers a 2TB subscription package, but at $9.99 per month, roughly triple the rate.

Size Matters

Another important consideration of cloud storage solutions is file size limitations. Users of TeraBoxs free service can upload files as large as 4GB, while subscribers can upload files up to 20GB. TeraBoxs sharing function has no limit on file size, so no matter how big a file, it can easily be shared with other users.

Learn More

For further facts or to acquire the app, go to http://www.terabox.com or look for TeraBox in the Android app store.

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Picture This: A Free Alternative To Google Photos - Warwick Beacon

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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Coty, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Smucker and others – CNBC

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Coty (COTY) The cosmetics maker's shares added 2.7% in the premarket after it said it expects a return to annual sales growth this year. Coty's adjusted loss for its latest quarter was 9 cents per share, 3 cents wider than expected, but sales did come in above Wall Street forecasts.

Dollar General (DG) The discount retailer beat estimates by 10 cents with adjusted quarterly earnings of $2.69 per share and revenue slightly above forecasts. Comparable store sales fell 4.7%, less than the 5.1% drop expected by analysts surveyed by StreetAccount. However, Dollar General did forecast lower-than-expected earnings for the full year, and its shares fell 2.9% in premarket trading.

Dollar Tree (DLTR) Dollar Tree shares fell 3.1% in premarket trading after the discount retailer posted a mixed quarter. Revenue fell below Street forecasts, while earnings of $1.23 per share did beat the consensus estimate of $1.00.

J.M. Smucker (SJM) The food producer earned an adjusted $1.90 per share for its latest quarter, 4 cents above estimates, with revenue slightly above Wall Street projections. However, Smucker cut its full-year forecast, noting higher input costs and supply chain disruption. Shares lost 1.9% in the premarket.

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) The apparel retailer's shares slid 7% in the premarket, as revenue fell below analyst forecasts. Abercrombie did report an adjusted profit of $1.70 per share, compared with a 77-cent consensus estimate.

Salesforce.com (CRM) Salesforce earned an adjusted $1.48 per share for the second quarter, beating the 92 cents consensus estimate, with revenue also topping Wall Street forecasts. Salesforce also issued an upbeat outlook as companies continue to shift applications to the cloud. Shares rose 2.9% in premarket trading.

Ulta Beauty (ULTA) Ulta shares rallied 6.4% in the premarket after it more than doubled the $2.59 consensus estimate with a quarterly profit of $4.56 per share. The cosmetics retailer's revenue beat estimates as well, and it raised its full-year outlook as an overall improvement in the beauty industry continues.

Williams-Sonoma (WSM) Williams-Sonoma surged 15.2% in premarket trading following top and bottom-line beats as well as a raised outlook and a 20% dividend increase. The housewares retailer reported an adjusted quarterly profit of $3.24 per share compared with the $2.61 consensus estimate, as the pandemic-induced focus on homes and home decor continued.

Box (BOX) Box beat estimates by 2 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of 21 cents per share, while the cloud storage company's revenue also came in above analyst forecasts. Box also raised its full-year revenue guidance, saying it continues to benefit from the "megatrend" of digital transformation. However, shares fell 1.7% in premarket action

Snowflake (SNOW) Snowflake lost an adjusted 4 cents per share for its latest quarter, narrower than the 15-cent loss anticipated by Wall Street, while the database software company's revenue came in above consensus. Sales more than doubled from a year ago, but its overall loss widened compared with a year earlier. Snowflake jumped 5.2% in premarket trading.

Pure Storage (PSTG) Pure Storage soared 14.1% in the premarket after it nearly tripled the 5-cent consensus estimate with adjusted quarterly earnings of 14 cents per share. The cloud storage company's revenue also topped Street projections as subscription revenue rose 31% from a year ago.

Autodesk (ADSK) Autodesk shares tumbled 7.7% in premarket trading, as quarterly revenue was merely in line with estimates and its current-quarter earnings guidance disappointed investors. Autodesk did beat estimates by 8 cents for its latest quarter with adjusted quarterly earnings of $1.21 per share.

Western Digital (WDC) Western Digital is in talks for a possible $20 billion merger with Japanese chipmaker Kioxia, according to multiple reports. Talks are said to have heated up in recent weeks, and a deal could be reached as early as mid-September, according to people familiar with the matter. Western Digital rose 1% in the premarket.

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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Coty, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Smucker and others - CNBC

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