Data Hosting? Your Best Location May Be Atlanta Data Center
The economy is rising from recession, so virtual reality companies are today seeking space to locate their machines, stressing reliability, experienced service, hosting service flexibility and stable power among many factors. Located in Atlanta, Georgia, the Atlanta Data Center hosts numerous companies in the Marietta and Williams Streets addresses. The companies belong to the three categories of virtual companies by size, the largest being of the first tier. They are Verizon, AT&T, SunGuard and Savvis. The middle tier includes Peak 10 and Atlanta NAP, and the third tier consists of smaller companies that cater to lower-priced enterprises.
Because not only do these enterprises need stable power, dependable back-up mechanisms, easy connectivity and some others due to the capacity of their capital and nature of business. Atlanta Hosting can offer all these and other things besides.
For instance, the Atlanta center was designed specifically to host a network able to provide a good range of quality bandwidths. Actually, because it is a unit of the Tulix Systems, Inc., it is mandated to render the quality service and support demanded by Tier 1 providers. Furthermore, it was made to be custom-versatile, able to adapt itself to its customer’s specific requirements in this fast-evolving virtual business world.
The qualities of Atlanta Colo that convinced these companies to locate there are naturally applicable to other similar, even much smaller, enterprises as well.
One of its advantages offered to potential customers is its proximity to fiber optic nerve centers and lines, which offer faster-than-standard connectivity speeds. Also, the Center is connected to the major POP TELX Marietta 55, which accesses hundreds of national and region-wide data providers. Furthermore, the Center’s fiber network utilizes the latest-technology SONET and FDDI systems in the network circuits. SONET technology digitally rush multiple bit streams through optical fibers using lasers or LEDs. High-end Cisco routers and switches connect the Center to the Internet, and remain continuously active, reverting to redistribution of traffic loads via HRSP protocols in case of failure, for minimum downtime for sites.
Another advantage the center offers to prospective provider client sites is its European and North American GigE connections. The Telia-Sonera is the European provider of backbone direct link, Level III Communications is the one for North America, and likewise for Europe, Cogent Communications.
The Center is designed for all-the-time performance and availability, with backup servers activating in lieu of production servers when failure occurs, which is, historically, very rare. Backing up occurs daily unless the weekly option is selected, but either assures 90% uptime and thus data accessibility for shared servers, and 99.5% for dedicated servers. To do this, the Atlanta Center has redundant SNMP-management for its servers, with the secondary one in a remote location that ensures detection of problems the internal SNMP monitor may not have detected.
In such and many other vital ways does The Center maintain its reputation as leading data center service provider since 1994. In the data service field, leadership means top performance all the time.
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