When the Microsoft Exchange is under maintenance, cloud-based enterprise solution will back up your corporate e-mail. Google’s new launch Message Continuity will facilitate this feature.
The new product is powered by Postini the new acquisition of Google in 2007 and its main aim is on giving companies a different access point to their e-mail accounts. It basically creates a total backup copy of Microsoft Exchange Servers and puts those e-mails into a Google Apps account, replicating that information within Gmail, Calendar and Contacts.
The expectation is that when a company’s e-mail servers go down, it will be able to boot up Google’s cloud-based solution and keep on its work devoid of any disruption. Google and Exchange are always coordinated to make sure Message Continuity is up-to-date. And because it’s cloud-based, the only way it goes down is if Google goes down.
It is not an easy endeavor by the search giant to get enterprises to toggle from Outlook to Gmail. According to the company’s blog post, “Since Microsoft Exchange and Gmail are always in sync with one another, there’s no need to migrate e-mail data when eventually deploying Google Apps,”
Google purchased Postini in 2007 for $625 million for its cloud-based e-mail technology. It’s the starting point for some of Google’s security features.
The new product is powered by Postini the new acquisition of Google in 2007 and its main aim is on giving companies a different access point to their e-mail accounts. It basically creates a total backup copy of Microsoft Exchange Servers and puts those e-mails into a Google Apps account, replicating that information within Gmail, Calendar and Contacts.
The expectation is that when a company’s e-mail servers go down, it will be able to boot up Google’s cloud-based solution and keep on its work devoid of any disruption. Google and Exchange are always coordinated to make sure Message Continuity is up-to-date. And because it’s cloud-based, the only way it goes down is if Google goes down.
It is not an easy endeavor by the search giant to get enterprises to toggle from Outlook to Gmail. According to the company’s blog post, “Since Microsoft Exchange and Gmail are always in sync with one another, there’s no need to migrate e-mail data when eventually deploying Google Apps,”
Google purchased Postini in 2007 for $625 million for its cloud-based e-mail technology. It’s the starting point for some of Google’s security features.
No comments:
Post a Comment