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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
PR Contact
Bob McCarthy
415-517-9658
bmccarthy@365main.com
BLACKOUT DAMAGES
UNPROTECTED COMPANIES
those storing data in protected
facilities maintain connectivity during the outage
San Francisco, August 15,
2003 – The August 14-15 blackout
“knocked tens of millions of people back to the pre-digital
age,” said the The Globe And Mail. The blackout of the
East Coast – which ranged as far west as Ohio, and as
far east as Connecticut – knocked out power and communications
to millions, and sent workers in darkened offices home early.
The multiple redundancy systems built into the Internet allowed
data communications traffic to continue without a hitch, with
data automatically rerouting itself to paths that had not
been shut off.
Companies
located in the blackout zone that had planned ahead –
housing their Internet hosting and critical data with a specially
designed carrier hotel – were unfazed by the outage.
Though lights were out, mobile phones were dead, and people
were starting their long walks home, those companies knew
that their Internet presence was still visible, their e-commerce
availability was fully viable, and that their critical data
was safely guarded. Companies that had not performed such
advance planning, however…well, we’ll see how
they did when the official damage estimates from this blackout
are released.
If such
a disaster struck the West Coast, some of the most confident
businesspeople would have one thing in common – The
Main Exchange. The Exchange was constructed to keep data safe
and Internet connectivity alive, and contains greater infrastructure
redundancy and better physical stabilization than its competitors.
With
ten 2.1 installed Megawatt generators, full on-site utility
integration, N+2 or greater redundancy on all systems, 60,000
gallons of fuel on site, and ironclad fuel delivery contracts,
the Main Exchange is California’s most secure data center.
“This building is designed to survive earthquakes, power
outages, and other disasters,” said Jean Paul Balajadia,
Vice President of the Exchange. “If the East Coast outage
had happened in San Francisco, our technicians wouldn’t
have noticed so much as a light blinking on site. Our on site
capabilities and multiple redundancies guarantee that our
customers’ data and Internet traffic can survive almost
any challenge.”
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