Update: As Rita drew near, Web hosting vendor prepared
The Houston-based company planned to ride out the hurricane
September 24, 2005 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
As powerful Hurricane Rita barreled into the Texas and Louisiana coasts early this morning, about 25 employees of Houston-based Web hosting vendor EV1Servers.net expected to hunker down inside the company's offices and two data centers. Their goal: maintain services for their customers during the storm, and after.
Rita blew ashore about 3:30 a.m. EDT with 120 mile-an-hour sustained winds, landing just east of the Texas-Louisiana state border.
Since earlier this week, EV1Servers.net had been making storm preparations, from bringing in a redundant backup emergency generator to sending nonessential workers to join the evacuations ordered by the city.
This time, many tech businesses are better prepared than in 2001, when Tropical Storm Allison inundated Houston with torrential rain in early June 2001, flooding much of the downtown (see "Houston floods teach IT managers readiness lessons").
Robert Marsh, CEO of EV1Servers.net, said lessons learned from Allison four years ago included relocating essential electronic equipment to higher floors from basements, where critical communications and IT equipment was swamped during Allison. "There was certainly a lot of that going around" at the time, he said.
EV1 is a managed Web hosting company that owns and manages some 25,000 hosted servers for business customers. A separate division provides Internet access for about 300,000 customers.
To get ready for Rita, EV1 sent seven Web technicians to a hotel in Wichita, Kan. The technicians, who handle customer trouble tickets, will be in an emergency call center established to help customers after the storm passes. The workers were sent to Kansas in a chartered jet early yesterday.
In Houston, EV1's 25,000 servers are located in two data centers housed in concrete buildings designed to sustain Category 4 storms, he said. "We have absolute confidence in our facilities," Marsh said yesterday, as Rita was still churning out in the Gulf of Mexico. "But it becomes a little dicey when you look at the transport backbone to the Internet," which could be disrupted by downed lines and other storm-related problems.
For that reason, EV1 has redundant services with seven bandwidth providers using 28 separate 1-Gigabit links. "We have the ability with at least one of those carriers to provision new service" if needed within hours, not days, he said. "If we lose one provider, if we lose two providers, we're probably still in good shape. If we lose four carriers, then we'd have a problem."
The company hosts more than 1 million Web sites on its servers.
Inside its data centers, the company has many spare parts on hand, including
Disaster Recovery
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