Our primary use case for Arcserve UDP is its decompression feature, which helped us save money by reducing storage needs. Despite moving to cloud applications, we have been using Arcserve UDP for backup and disaster recovery.
Arcserve UDP Point-in-Time is based on capturing historical data. It can recreate data from point A to point B and replicate it. It automates the restoration process, positioning the DLP feature once the card is completed.
Full Pre-Sales Analyst at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Real User
Top 10
2024-03-21T20:19:39Z
Mar 21, 2024
I build projects with Arcserve UDP and other security products from the company. I work with firewalls, network security, single sign-on, etcetera. Mostly my clients – we have the solution internally too, but my position in the company focuses on those clients that use Arcserve. My experience has been a mixed bag.
Information Technology Specialist at ARC ONE (PVT) LTD
Real User
Top 5
2023-10-16T08:54:23Z
Oct 16, 2023
Most of the use cases associated with Arcserve UDP are related to virtual machine backup, for which we use it sometimes, though it is not the fastest one. Arcserve UDP is mostly used as a backup in SAP HANA. Even now, since Arcserve can't trigger the backup from the console, we decided to replace it with Commvault in our company. Still, in our company, we use Arcserve UDP for a few customers for virtual machine backup, as it works perfectly fine with no issues.
We have a customer who is into manufacturing. They have multiple plants and a central server for backup. It’s a hybrid environment. It is a traditional enterprise backup software.
I am a partner for StorageCraft and work with my customers who are small businesses and use the solution to backup their servers. I am able to backup to a local disk and replicate it in my data center where I have a small network for software applications and customer backups.
I am a very small organization. I am a single person with a group of clients and most of them are five to ten seats. I do onsite backups and I deal with ShadowProtect, and a couple of clients have moved up to their cloud solution. I will continue with this type of architecture for the small amount that I do. We are using this solution almost exclusively for a single-server backup.
Arcserve UDP is a comprehensive solution that empowers even a one-person IT department to protect virtual and physical environments with a high degree of simplicity. It allows you to design and manage your entire data protection strategy with a unified management console, and enables you to scale your data backup coverage as your organization grows with the push of a button.
Our primary use case for Arcserve UDP is its decompression feature, which helped us save money by reducing storage needs. Despite moving to cloud applications, we have been using Arcserve UDP for backup and disaster recovery.
Arcserve UDP Point-in-Time is based on capturing historical data. It can recreate data from point A to point B and replicate it. It automates the restoration process, positioning the DLP feature once the card is completed.
I build projects with Arcserve UDP and other security products from the company. I work with firewalls, network security, single sign-on, etcetera. Mostly my clients – we have the solution internally too, but my position in the company focuses on those clients that use Arcserve. My experience has been a mixed bag.
My company operates as a solution provider, meaning we don't use the product for ourselves, and we deal with it mostly for our clients.
We use Arcserve UDP for backup recovery and replication with HA (High Availability) and DR (Disaster Recovery).
I am using the tool for backup, replication, and Instant VMs.
Most of the use cases associated with Arcserve UDP are related to virtual machine backup, for which we use it sometimes, though it is not the fastest one. Arcserve UDP is mostly used as a backup in SAP HANA. Even now, since Arcserve can't trigger the backup from the console, we decided to replace it with Commvault in our company. Still, in our company, we use Arcserve UDP for a few customers for virtual machine backup, as it works perfectly fine with no issues.
We have a customer who is into manufacturing. They have multiple plants and a central server for backup. It’s a hybrid environment. It is a traditional enterprise backup software.
Our customers use the solution for online backup, recovery, and replication. We have deployed the solution for around 20 customers.
We use the solution as backup software for our clients' on-premises servers.
The solution is used for image backup and recovery.
I am using StorageCraft ShadowProtect on servers and desktop computers.
I am a partner for StorageCraft and work with my customers who are small businesses and use the solution to backup their servers. I am able to backup to a local disk and replicate it in my data center where I have a small network for software applications and customer backups.
We primarily use StorageCraft ShadowProtect for small and medium-sized businesses, backup servers, desktops, and public servers.
I am a very small organization. I am a single person with a group of clients and most of them are five to ten seats. I do onsite backups and I deal with ShadowProtect, and a couple of clients have moved up to their cloud solution. I will continue with this type of architecture for the small amount that I do. We are using this solution almost exclusively for a single-server backup.