Compliance Makes Headlines, but IT Efficiency Still Top Reason for E-Mail Archiving.SPRINGFIELD, Mass. & READING, England -- Compliance concerns may make the headlines, but system performance is still the top reason for e-mail archiving Retaining e-mail messages for historical purposes or to be in compliance with many industry regulations. The file structure of e-mail is different than other data formats, and message archiving software is specialized for e-mail retention and searching. . A March 2005 survey by C2C's Archive One division and Osterman Research polled 107 organizations and found that 63.2 percent of companies stated overloaded mailboxes as a driver to archive and manage e-mail. More than 61 percent of respondents noted problems of increasing backup and restore times, and almost 53 percent mentioned increasing message size. These results are not dramatically different from similar survey questions asked a year ago. In December 2003, 59 percent of C2C/Osterman survey respondents said that they were archiving to reduce server loads and improve system efficiency. At that time, the top three IT worries were increasing backup and restore times, increasing message size and lack of messaging-related disk space. With the 2005 survey, compliance with government data retention statutes has edged out server performance as the number two driver for e-mail archiving (59.8 and 54.2 percent, respectively), and enforcing an e-mail retention or deletion policy is the third most serious problem for organizations. "Archiving is becoming a more critical concern to organizations as they are beginning to realize the impact of Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191) Also known as the "Kennedy-Kassebaum Act," this U.S. law protects employees' health insurance coverage when they change or lose their jobs (Title I) and provides standards for patient health, and the need for litigation/discovery support," says Michael Osterman, president of Osterman Research, Inc., a market research firm in Black Diamond, WA. ABOUT C2C (Client to Client) An earlier term for peer-to-peer (P2P), in which one user communicates with another user without going through a server in between. See peer-to-peer. C2C (www.c2c.com) provides applications to optimize Microsoft Exchange Messaging and groupware software for Windows from Microsoft. Exchange Server is an Internet-compliant e-mail system that runs under Windows NT/2000 and Windows Server 2003. It can be accessed by Web browsers, the Exchange client, versions of Outlook and the earlier Windows Inbox. system resources (1) In a computer system, system resources are the components that provide its inherent capabilities and contribute to its overall performance. System memory, cache memory, hard disk space, IRQs and DMA channels are examples. and reduce the legal risks associated with e-mail. C2C's solutions for e-mail archiving, mailbox A simulated mailbox in the computer that holds e-mail messages. Mailboxes are stored on disk as a file of messages, a database of messages or as an individual file for each message. The standard mailboxes are usually In, Out, Trash and Junk (Spam). size management, search and discovery are used by three million users at more than 2,000 organizations worldwide. C2C, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner, is headquartered in Reading, United Kingdom, with U.S. offices in Springfield, Mass. |
|
||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion