You've found the backup wrap-up your go-to podcast for all things,
Speaker:backup recovery and cyber recovery.
Speaker:And this episode, we share a fascinating disaster recovery case
Speaker:study that will blow your mind.
Speaker:I'm talking with someone who had to do an actual Dr.
Speaker:In the worst possible circumstances on an island.
Speaker:After a hurricane took out everything.
Speaker:And when I say everything, I mean, everything, the data center, the
Speaker:infrastructure, even the trees.
Speaker:He had to sleep on an air mattress, eat chicken and rice for two weeks and
Speaker:figure out how to restore systems when basic assumptions like we have internet.
Speaker:Weren't true anymore.
Speaker:If you've ever wondered what a real Dr.
Speaker:Situation looks like, you're about to find out.
Speaker:Plus we get into some serious discussions about backup strategy and why.
Speaker:Assuming things will work.
Speaker:Isn't the same as testing them.
Speaker:Trust me, you don't want to miss this episode.
Speaker:By the way it is a classic episode from four years ago, it was an amazing story.
Speaker:Then it's a great story now.
Speaker:And so we're bringing it to you during the holidays.
Speaker:I hope you enjoy it.
Speaker:Welcome to the show . I'm your host, w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr.
Speaker:Backup, and I have with me my, my meat advisor.
Speaker:Prasanna Malaiyandi.
Speaker:How's it going?
Speaker:Persona,
Speaker:I don't know if I'm your meat advisor.
Speaker:I think I am.
Speaker:Your, uh.
Speaker:Uh, what do they say?
Speaker:Sort of your apprentice or wishing to be your apprentice.
Speaker:You're, you're, yeah.
Speaker:You're not my, I'm guessing you, you have a lot of vegetarian
Speaker:dishes in your house, right?
Speaker:Yes,
Speaker:we do have a, my wife is vegetarian and Right.
Speaker:Typically we do vegetarian, and given that we eat a lot of Indian food, Indian
Speaker:food, you can make a ton of dishes without ever having to make anything meat.
Speaker:So there's a lot of variety.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, so, so you're more sort of an, you're, you're, you're my meat enthusiast.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:How's
Speaker:that?
Speaker:You, you, you're meat curious.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:But meat curious.
Speaker:But I do want to hear about your latest adventure, because I've been, I've
Speaker:been asking you, I think almost every week how your dry aging is going.
Speaker:So I know that this will probably come out later, but now that.
Speaker:Technically we're recording this after Thanksgiving.
Speaker:I wanna know how was it and what happened.
Speaker:So I'm gonna, I'm gonna bring on our guest and then, uh, and then
Speaker:we'll, we'll chitchat about that.
Speaker:So, uh, we have, uh, it's a rare treat for us because I've been in it for so long.
Speaker:Rarely do I have someone who's been in it longer than me, and this is
Speaker:one of those times and I'm super excited because, uh, he started in
Speaker:it just after I was in high school.
Speaker:And, uh, started out in the hardware, uh, side of things, actually working
Speaker:and running Digital Equipment Corporation, which we call Deck.
Speaker:Uh, their internal email service went into a, uh, it, uh, has done a lot
Speaker:of things in data center operations, system administrator, data center
Speaker:manager, and he's recently retired.
Speaker:Super jelly.
Speaker:And, and now lives in Seattle.
Speaker:He is a friend of the person that we previously had on that we called
Speaker:Harry Potter to keep him anonymous.
Speaker:And so to continue that tradition, I would like to introduce to
Speaker:the podcast, uh, Ron Weasley.
Speaker:Hello.
Speaker:It's a pleasure to be
Speaker:here.
Speaker:You know, we had, we had your friend Harry Yes.
Speaker:On and um, and, and we, we had a great podcast there.
Speaker:But, um, I, I, I, I kept asking him, I was like, do you think that the guy that
Speaker:actually was the one with the fingers on the keyboard would, would talk to us?
Speaker:And he said, yes.
Speaker:And so here you are.
Speaker:Uh, but.
Speaker:So the, before we get to that, uh, we'll get back to the, to the meat conversation.
Speaker:So Ron, I have had a, a, an ongoing sort of a project of experimenting
Speaker:with dry aging meat at home.
Speaker:And I started out with these things called the umai bags, which UMAI,
Speaker:it's short for umami and, um.
Speaker:The, and so Thanksgiving was the first time I did a dry aged brisket at home.
Speaker:I, I think the dry aging process went really well.
Speaker:I didn't quite get, and by the way, if you are a brisket fan, uh, just
Speaker:go to YouTube and type in dry aged brisket and you'll see why I was
Speaker:interested in dry aging briskets.
Speaker:'cause the weird thing is that.
Speaker:A lot of people in the dry aging slash brisket community don't think
Speaker:that briskets benefit from dry aging, but these videos suggest otherwise.
Speaker:So I tried it out.
Speaker:The problem was that I had a, uh, a noon Thanksgiving we had for those
Speaker:concerned, we had a sort of COD friendly Thanksgiving gathering, so we had.
Speaker:We had 10 people.
Speaker:We did it outside.
Speaker:We were socially distanced.
Speaker:I actually rented tables and chairs so that I could do that and I, so that we
Speaker:could, you know, follow all the rules.
Speaker:Uh, but it was at noon and I had, so that meant I had to start my
Speaker:brisket at midnight and, um, it meant that part of the brisket.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:you're very dedicated.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Most brisket cooking was while I was sleeping.
Speaker:And, uh, let's just say the critical part is towards the end when you
Speaker:need to be checking doneness.
Speaker:And I was really not wanting to get up at five o'clock in the morning
Speaker:when this thing was really done.
Speaker:And so I kind of got up at six.
Speaker:And the difference between getting up at five and getting up at six
Speaker:is the difference between a brisket that is tender and a brisket that.
Speaker:Becomes pot roast and unfortunately, I blew my 60 day experiment.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:For an extra
Speaker:hour's sleep.
Speaker:So I had a, the brisket was super, super tender, super, super juicy.
Speaker:EAs easily the juiciest brisket I've ever cooked, but it was slightly overdone
Speaker:and so I was disappointed in it as the brisket maker, the people that.
Speaker:Loved it.
Speaker:Um, and so I had no complaints.
Speaker:I also had no brisket left.
Speaker:Yeah, that's when, you know, it was good when
Speaker:we were done.
Speaker:Uh, I think I grabbed a handful of it, uh, just so that I
Speaker:could, you know, eat it later.
Speaker:But yeah, we, we had a, like a 16 pound brisket that was
Speaker:completely gone from 10 people.
Speaker:Who also had a Turkey and a ham to eat.
Speaker:So, you know, I don't know.
Speaker:Was that a success?
Speaker:I, I just
Speaker:did a quick lookup of it, six to eight weeks.
Speaker:It's saying to, to do that, that's,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:A lot of it's time.
Speaker:It's
Speaker:dedication,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Dedication.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Really.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So I'm current, I'm currently in the process of an actual dry aging experiment
Speaker:where I have a dedicated refrigerator.
Speaker:With, uh, precise temperature and humidity control that's going
Speaker:on, like literally right now.
Speaker:It started December 1st, and I'm hoping to have the results of
Speaker:that by, by New Year's and have a New Year's, uh, dry aged brisket.
Speaker:But, um, but we don't know about that yet, so, um.
Speaker:We'll talk about that on later podcast.
Speaker:Ron, you listened to the podcast where we talked about you, right?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:With with Harry.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And the, the idea was that there was a hurricane.
Speaker:That took out, so this actually happened, by the way, this is, this is, you
Speaker:know, uh, this, this is a true story.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:The, so a hurricane took out an island.
Speaker:An island took out an island.
Speaker:You and Harry both worked for, you know, we'll call it Hogwarts.
Speaker:Someone had to go down there.
Speaker:Do the disaster recovery.
Speaker:My understanding is that it, it was sort of a toss up between you and Harry.
Speaker:And Harry couldn't get there fast enough and you could, and so you
Speaker:were on your way to, you drew
Speaker:the lucky straw, you drew the lucky, lucky straw.
Speaker:So
Speaker:you were on, you were on your own.
Speaker:Does that sound about right?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The um, one of the things, kind of the requirements was, um, because of.
Speaker:The nature of the response was you had to be comfortable doing command line
Speaker:recovery of the backup application.
Speaker:Why was that?
Speaker:Uh, just because you, um, you, you know, the, um, you're gonna
Speaker:be, um, on the console of the server for a lot of the Okay.
Speaker:So no gooey for you?
Speaker:No gooey, no gooey for you at the beginning?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Kind of a recap for the listeners who may not fully recall
Speaker:the episode, this is where.
Speaker:The hurricane took out the data center.
Speaker:I believe that you moved the servers into a different data center to try
Speaker:to recover, and you moved some of the backup infrastructure as well, correct?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So the, the way that the site had been set up was, um, that from.
Speaker:Like a, a main computing, um, standpoint.
Speaker:They had two main data centers and the design was to have, you know, half the
Speaker:capacity into one half the capacity and the other with, um, backups and copies.
Speaker:Going between the two.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so we had two backup systems and we replicated between the, the between
Speaker:them and so data center A would back up half of the servers and replicate
Speaker:the data center B and B would back up the other half and replicate the A.
Speaker:So each side had.
Speaker:Copies of all of the backups for the entire site.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And, um, so site A, uh, data center A was fine.
Speaker:Um, the building that data center B was in was the one that was
Speaker:damaged and the damage to the data center, um, wasn't direct.
Speaker:It was indirect in, you know, the building was damaged, but it was water
Speaker:damage that came flooding on down and, um, flooded the racks and actually had.
Speaker:Uh, you know, a foot or so of water, uh, in the, in the floor
Speaker:of the data center itself.
Speaker:Uh, the data centers were not raised floor data centers.
Speaker:They were, um, the, the everything was, um, you know, in cable trays above
Speaker:and suspended above kind of thing.
Speaker:So, uh, it was quick.
Speaker:It sounds like a bad
Speaker:combination to have with a.
Speaker:Plug Hurricane.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so like in, in, in the rack that had our equipment, so we had a, um, you know,
Speaker:backup server, um, uh, and a couple of, uh, media servers and then a storage, um,
Speaker:and um, and then a tape library and the library was at the bottom and the library
Speaker:was the one that was the damage the most.
Speaker:Um, the rest of the equipment, um, was okay, although the, some of the
Speaker:damage actually was caused by the, um.
Speaker:Desire to get the equipment quickly out of the one place into the other.
Speaker:And so when they were taking it out, they weren't as careful as they could
Speaker:have been with rails and whatnot.
Speaker:So we had some problems, um, racking the equipment up at the, at the new
Speaker:location, you know, and they took a, a small little server room and quickly
Speaker:converted it into a data center to house all of the, the facilities.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so, um.
Speaker:So that was from the backup system standpoint, the impact on it.
Speaker:Um, because the, because of the replication, we were able to start,
Speaker:um, providing restores of, of a lot of the servers that they needed.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:From the, from the A site, right.
Speaker:Uh, while we were recovering the, the backups system for the
Speaker:B site, we, we knew that we could do the recoveries from the A side.
Speaker:We just knew that when we started to bring back online, A wasn't gonna
Speaker:have the capacity to back it all up.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:We needed to get, be back on for going forward.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, and then we were.
Speaker:We were dealing with the fact that, um, we had to have vendors come in to work
Speaker:on their equipment and do a checkout.
Speaker:And we weren't, we didn't even fire it up until the vendor came in and certified
Speaker:that, that they were gonna continue to support it after we had done what we did.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:oh, that's interesting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so we had
Speaker:to wait, um, for them to be How long,
Speaker:how long, how long do you think it was between basically you arrived?
Speaker:And you could actually start doing something from, from, well, let me
Speaker:rephrase, but you could actually start doing a restore of any kind.
Speaker:Um, we were restoring.
Speaker:I was restoring, starting to restore servers the first or second day.
Speaker:Um, okay, so you have to understand that.
Speaker:Well, um, um, so the, the initial recovery team was a team of, uh, you
Speaker:know, like, like myself for the backups.
Speaker:We had a, uh, a.
Speaker:DBA there for, for handle the databases.
Speaker:They had some network people.
Speaker:Um, and then they actually had to fly in a couple of vendors for
Speaker:the, um, um, emergency generators.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, to, to them because, um, they were, um.
Speaker:The, the generators that put in were emergency generators, short term outage.
Speaker:Well, they found themselves faced with a long-term outage, uh, power wise, right?
Speaker:It was gonna be a long time before power was brought back.
Speaker:And so they were running their emergency generators way beyond the duty cycle.
Speaker:So they had guys in there, um, babying and keeping them going while they, uh, um.
Speaker:Came up with longer term solutions for how they were gonna power it.
Speaker:Um, so, um.
Speaker:So when they, when all this team get got together, as well as this was,
Speaker:was flowing in, and then you had the local, um, IT staff and that's
Speaker:just, just the whole site staff.
Speaker:Um, they had started to pull out their, um, recovery plan and which
Speaker:pieces of equipment that, uh, and which systems and that needed to
Speaker:come back online first, second, and third and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Oh, so they actually had a runbook and a.
Speaker:Plan put in place ahead of time to, to some
Speaker:degree.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, they, they kind of knew, you know, based on the business.
Speaker:What did
Speaker:that, what did that look like?
Speaker:Was it actually, I never
Speaker:saw it myself, you know?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, but I do know that one of the things it was kind of interesting
Speaker:is that, you know, the run book, um, that, that, uh, that they had was this.
Speaker:Somewhat abstract thing at the time because, you know, they thought
Speaker:about it and they planned and they, they tested little pieces of it,
Speaker:but they never tested it in its entirety, like the disaster presented.
Speaker:You know, you know, we, we talk about that all the time.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, Ron, that, that.
Speaker:That, that, that's exactly the same thing.
Speaker:Back in the day when I was firing backups and anger, when we did a DR test at the
Speaker:bank that I was at, that we never tested, because, you know, without the cloud,
Speaker:without virtualization and, you know, and, and additional hardware or whatever, doing
Speaker:a full DR test is ridiculously difficult.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:It's,
Speaker:and, and so no one, no one does that, no one tests their whole runbook, um, right.
Speaker:Or, well, well, now, I think now more people do.
Speaker:But, so it sounds like you had that problem.
Speaker:So they, they had this runbook, but it was primarily in theory up until,
Speaker:right.
Speaker:Because what they learned is, is, you know, as, as.
Speaker:They learned that they had made certain assumptions that they shouldn't have made.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And like one of the things,
Speaker:go ahead.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:like for instance, active directory design.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So the active directory for the island was tied to the mainland.
Speaker:To the, to the corporate data center.
Speaker:And when they broke the link to the corporate data center, they were, it's
Speaker:like, oh, we can't authenticate anything.
Speaker:So they had this, that's one of the first things they had to bring up.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, so help me understand there.
Speaker:So when, when the hurricane hit, basically they lost connection to the mainland?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So they had to, they had to do all of this locally.
Speaker:Um, interesting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, it's interesting.
Speaker:You would think that they would not make that assumption being an island.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Well, and, and, and see, uh, you know, um, a lot of it was driven by the
Speaker:experience of the local, you know, the local experience on the island.
Speaker:And, um, the, the prior hurricanes that they had had, had not been as devastating
Speaker:as that particular one that hit them.
Speaker:And so they were able to make it through without.
Speaker:The kinds of, of impact and losses that they, they, um, did, I mean, it walked,
Speaker:walked right up the middle of the island.
Speaker:I mean, it just devastated them.
Speaker:Um, and so, you know, so they were dealing with that.
Speaker:And then one of the other interesting things that, it took a interesting
Speaker:how it takes a while for you to figure out what's going on.
Speaker:They had this, um, um, satellite communication hookup,
Speaker:which was their fallback.
Speaker:And so that was the way they were talking between, um.
Speaker:Uh, you know, from, from the facility there to the, to the corporate end of it.
Speaker:And every day, like around noon or so, the, um, connections
Speaker:would start dropping off.
Speaker:I was using it to try to, to phone home, you know, in the afternoons, couldn't
Speaker:get a, uh, a connection or anything.
Speaker:And they were like, what's going on?
Speaker:It was working fine in the morning, but in the afternoon and one of the
Speaker:network guys started poking around.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:You know, and he actually called the dish mo slightly.
Speaker:Well, what it was was that it was an emergency and um, it was supposed to
Speaker:be for emergency only, short term.
Speaker:Again, one of these short term kinds of things.
Speaker:And they had turned it into their main network link.
Speaker:Well it was, um, it was a metered thing 'cause it was shared by all, you know,
Speaker:all the other emergency equipment.
Speaker:So they would use up their full.
Speaker:A day's allotment by noon or, or even earlier sometimes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Also, they had, had, they had a bandwidth allotment up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so then they were meter in the afternoon.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so they had to, they had to work.
Speaker:That was one huge, you
Speaker:know, you know what this reminds me of?
Speaker:You know, it's, you have unlimited bandwidth.
Speaker:Just don't use too much of it.
Speaker:Just, yeah, just don't use, don't use it all.
Speaker:You hit your
Speaker:data cap and we're gonna meter you.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:So they, that was a huge thing for, for the networks was to work on,
Speaker:um, and work with, uh, you know, the vendors and that to try to get, um.
Speaker:A, a, a reliable, fast enough connection and multiple connections.
Speaker:Um, I, since I'm no longer, um, working with them, I don't
Speaker:know the, the end results.
Speaker:I do know that they were, um, headed towards several, um, um, different
Speaker:microwave connections from the facility.
Speaker:To, um, you know, to, to a, a main link that would then take them to the mainland.
Speaker:Um, running their dedicated link themselves to the mainland was,
Speaker:you know, just cost prohibited.
Speaker:Uh, you know, it's interesting.
Speaker:I I, I did wanna just mention, I, I'm wondering the degree to which this
Speaker:new, so Elon Musk has now come out with this, uh, I mean, they're right.
Speaker:They're in beta right now, and it's a completely redesigned way to do.
Speaker:Satellite based internet connections, starlink, where they have starlink,
Speaker:starlink, where they starlink, where they have all of these, um, satellites in.
Speaker:Um, it's a different kind of orbit, I guess than than usual.
Speaker:And, and they're saying that they can actually get both bandwidth
Speaker:and latency equal to and or better than, um, what you can do.
Speaker:On land, and so it, it, it's, I I don't know the degree to, I don't
Speaker:know how much it scales up mm-hmm.
Speaker:For a data center connection, but it, it, it's just, it's just the interesting,
Speaker:you know, thoughts towards the future for things like islands that are,
Speaker:you know, cut off the way they are.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I like, even, even, you know, the, this, the microwave connection.
Speaker:Like how reliable is the main connection that they're connecting to there?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It's probably pretty reliable, but what if it wasn't right?
Speaker:What if that went down?
Speaker:Then you're, you're really right.
Speaker:Well, and, and what they were running into there was like, um, remote,
Speaker:I, I'm gonna use transceivers, but maybe that's not the right word.
Speaker:But you have a, um, a, a remote tower that is.
Speaker:Relaying, you know, it's a relay.
Speaker:Um, and so, you know, it's, it's receiving a signal and you know,
Speaker:because microwave is line of sight.
Speaker:And so if you're gonna go, um, you know, over mountainous things, you
Speaker:have to send it between a series of towers to get it to where you wanna go.
Speaker:And, um, they were finding out that they would lose a tower.
Speaker:And when they go out and look, well, somebody had gone
Speaker:out and stolen all the gas.
Speaker:Outta the generator because gas was like hard to get.
Speaker:Oh, yeah.
Speaker:Um, and then, um, or, or people were ripping up, um, you know, 'cause power
Speaker:lines and all the, all the sound people were ripping out the copper, you know,
Speaker:so, so you run into that kinda stuff where that just made the recovery
Speaker:effort, you know, external to the site hard, um, which then impacted the site.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You were dealing, you were dealing, in this case, you, you had
Speaker:somewhat of a perfect storm where you're dealing with the fact that
Speaker:your data centers were flooded.
Speaker:You weren't, uh, you didn't have a raised floor.
Speaker:Uh, so that makes that problem worse.
Speaker:And then you didn't, you know, the, the, the Dr.
Speaker:Design made assumptions that were no longer true.
Speaker:And then meanwhile, the, the things that you did have were being frustrated by.
Speaker:Other things that were, yes.
Speaker:It's like, Hey, can you, can you stop messing with the things that actually
Speaker:work while we're trying to put the data center back together over here?
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:That's, you know, we, we, we live in backup land and we think of the, the,
Speaker:the restore is the part we focus on.
Speaker:But it sounds like most of the problems that you were experiencing
Speaker:had nothing to do with the actual act of getting data from.
Speaker:Storage devices to server?
Speaker:No,
Speaker:actually that part of it went, um, went well in, in the areas.
Speaker:The, um, the issues that we ran into was, um, like you said, the, um, the
Speaker:disconnect between the design or intent and the reality as it, as it unfolded.
Speaker:Um, you know, they'd say, oh, so we need, you know, this server, uh.
Speaker:Brought back online.
Speaker:Um, so find the most recent backup and you start looking through.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And it's like, oh, we're not backing that up.
Speaker:You know, when did you bring that online?
Speaker:Why didn't you tell us?
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Um, and so we ran into a few of those where, um, we couldn't give them, uh.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Oh, that, that is one of the most frustrating.
Speaker:So, um, and then, um, well, and, and, and then, you know, or we're backing it
Speaker:up, but we're not including everything, you know, so, um, we're backing it up
Speaker:in the sense that we're doing an OS backup, but the data that's on it, you
Speaker:didn't include it, you know, so the, um.
Speaker:So thi this was a net backup shop, so you were not using all local
Speaker:drives, is what you're saying.
Speaker:And, and it was funny that when I first hired on there, came on board, um,
Speaker:they were in the middle of, um, of a, um, upgrade and kind of a transition.
Speaker:Uh, the, the manager in charge of the backups and, and
Speaker:whatnot at the time, um, was.
Speaker:It was pushing this, we, we should only back up what we really need.
Speaker:And so he was trying to push the, uh, I hate that responsibility onto the
Speaker:data owners and saying, you need to define what's important to you and
Speaker:let us know and we'll back it up.
Speaker:So they stopped all local drives.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And um.
Speaker:I, you know, here's the thing, I, I don't, I don't disagree with the idea
Speaker:of not backing up worthless data.
Speaker:I don't disagree with that idea.
Speaker:What I disagree with is the implementation of, okay, so it, what I believe is mm-hmm.
Speaker:You should identify what is worthless and then we will exclude that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Not identify what is valuable that Right.
Speaker:And then we will in include that.
Speaker:I, I just, I just disagree with that, the implementation and just
Speaker:because you always forget things.
Speaker:Well, you always forget things and then you, you add things.
Speaker:It's just like the server that he talked about, right?
Speaker:You end up adding file systems and the, the, I, you know, I go back to
Speaker:when I helped redesign the, the backup system for a broadcasting company.
Speaker:Uh, they were 20 terabytes as I recall when I got there.
Speaker:And one of the things they weren't doing is that they
Speaker:weren't doing all local drives.
Speaker:And I pushed really hard that we should do all local drives as
Speaker:part of the redesign, we did it, we discovered 10 more terabytes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Of, of data that they weren't, that they weren't backing it up.
Speaker:And yes, it was really valuable data.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Well what, what I found interesting, um.
Speaker:Through that whole process of, you know, coming on board with that, um,
Speaker:trying to push that idea of, of the data owners being responsible to identify
Speaker:and we back up what they say to then we have to do with this recovery.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, I.
Speaker:My experience.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, yeah.
Speaker:And my experiences in who, whose fault has it been Ron, over the, over
Speaker:the time that I've been involved in, you know, the system side of things.
Speaker:Um, and watching, watching the way things unfold over time is that is
Speaker:really good in theory, that approach of making the, the data owners
Speaker:responsible for identifying it.
Speaker:But what I have.
Speaker:Learned and watched has been.
Speaker:The real weakness of that is, um, you know, data owners come and go and
Speaker:you don't get the transition between.
Speaker:An outgoing data owner and incoming data owner of what's
Speaker:covered, what's not covered.
Speaker:Um, you know, I know that I struggled all through my time, um, in, in, you
Speaker:know, um, it thing of doing proper and adequate documentation so that if I were
Speaker:hit by a bus as, as the saying goes, um, somebody would know what was, you
Speaker:know, what to do when they stepped in.
Speaker:Um, but I don't think that that was.
Speaker:Happening across the board.
Speaker:And so, you know, you'd have an assistant was brought online, you know, like four
Speaker:years ago you had a very conscientious data owner who identified all this
Speaker:stuff and it's covered well Over those four years that guy moved on and
Speaker:somebody else not so dedicated, came in.
Speaker:Some changes were made that weren't documented.
Speaker:That weren't covered, you know, and so then you have,
Speaker:you fast forward to, to the.
Speaker:Disaster and you have a situation well, well, we are only backing
Speaker:up part of it, you know, and, and
Speaker:yeah, this is why, or this is why I'm a strong proponent, a, a of
Speaker:virtualization and B, B, b, the reason with virtualization, it, it helps
Speaker:to, it helps to minimize this problem because really all we have to do is make
Speaker:sure we understand, we know about new.
Speaker:You know, VMware servers or HyperV servers, and then you can, you
Speaker:can tell your backup server or your backup software, uh, back
Speaker:up all VMs that show up on this thing, unless I tell you otherwise.
Speaker:And when you're backing up those VMs, backup up everything on those VMs.
Speaker:So you, you solve this problem, uh, you know, from a more global perspective.
Speaker:Um, and, but this idea.
Speaker:The, you know, we could talk for hours on all of the things that could go
Speaker:wrong with manually selecting data sets.
Speaker:Uh, and you know what, if you, if you back up a, a few terabytes of
Speaker:worthless data, that is way, that is a much smaller problem than the one
Speaker:you that this discussion started with.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Which is.
Speaker:Restart this.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I'm trying to restore the server.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it wasn't
Speaker:backed up.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:Virtualization, I think, you know, it was, it was fun to watch that come
Speaker:in and be part of that coming in.
Speaker:And it did make backups easier from a pers you know, from the
Speaker:perspective of, of, um, you got it all.
Speaker:You know, you just, I mean, the equivalent of all local drives
Speaker:was the default for, for VMs.
Speaker:One of the things that we struggled with.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Uh, was that we were never able to convince and get the, um, virtualization
Speaker:team to agree upon some kind of a scheme that they would manage their
Speaker:VMs under that would allow us to do.
Speaker:What you said, um, Curtis, this, uh, the
Speaker:automatic discovery of new vm.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:It's like, you know, if you had just pick something, a folder,
Speaker:a, you know, whatever kind of,
Speaker:or tags or whatever they wanted to use
Speaker:the limiter, you could do, you could do within the, the virtualization software
Speaker:to identify, you know, production machines, development machines,
Speaker:however you wanted to break 'em up.
Speaker:And then we come in and says, you know, in this, on this server, on this.
Speaker:Cluster, whatever, back up all of these types of machines, then we wouldn't
Speaker:have to worry when they added machines or took machines away, you know?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, you know, we, we still had the same problems in the, with the virtual
Speaker:servers that we did, with the physical servers of them not telling us
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:The, I, I think the, the right long-term solution there is, is tags, right?
Speaker:And, and then, and then I think that there should be a policy that
Speaker:says if you have a VM that has no tags, start backing it up, put it
Speaker:in this policy, and then yell at me.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Because that way you can say, Hey, there's a new vm.
Speaker:And then they, then they can come to you and go, oh, that's, that's
Speaker:test or dev or whatever, and, and you can take it out right?
Speaker:It's funny how, it's funny how, no.
Speaker:You know, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:And, and the key, I mean that I learned in mine, uh, experience for this particular
Speaker:one, this, um, was in the, all the times I did, well, not quite true, this was.
Speaker:The biggest disaster.
Speaker:I should, let me put it that way.
Speaker:'cause I've been involved in a couple of other DR scenarios
Speaker:that were very small, um mm-hmm.
Speaker:Kinds of issues, you know.
Speaker:Um, we had
Speaker:nothing beats a completely wiped out island.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Though we had
Speaker:a data center.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, uh, that had a similar problem where, um.
Speaker:Somebody had not properly cut the holes in the ceiling of the
Speaker:data center or plugged them when they were running cables through.
Speaker:And a lab had a, um, a problem and the sprinklers were released and
Speaker:the water came down and flooded a corner of this data center.
Speaker:Um, and it happened to be in a city by the Bay.
Speaker:Um, but um, we ended up.
Speaker:Shipping their tapes up or up to our facility and then doing the,
Speaker:the, um, import to be able to then do the restore from our facility
Speaker:while they were recovering.
Speaker:Um, you know, the site down there.
Speaker:So we had, I had that one before, but one of the things that I've
Speaker:noticed that's kind of like, I think a problem, it's important to.
Speaker:The, the proper implementation of a, of a DR resolution.
Speaker:Um, as well as just the planning, the building and setting up your
Speaker:infrastructure, your IT infrastructure so that it can be recoverable.
Speaker:And that's communication among the various teams and groups that are responsible
Speaker:for all the pieces that make up, you know, an IT infrastructure and, um.
Speaker:You know, that wasn't a strong point with that company.
Speaker:Um, they, there was some regulatory reasons why they needed to make
Speaker:sure that, um, no one person had the keys to the kingdom kind of thing.
Speaker:But the way they did it tended to put walls between the groups and
Speaker:so they weren't communicating in a manner, um, that I feel that they
Speaker:should have, that would've helped.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:You know, address like the left hand, not yeah.
Speaker:Knowing what the right hand is doing
Speaker:well and, and address some of the assumptions, you know, address some of
Speaker:the assumptions because I've learned in, in a lot of my implementations, you
Speaker:know, um, anytime doing it, you know, uh, learned a long time ago in the
Speaker:beginning that you gotta have a plan.
Speaker:You gotta kind of figure out what you're gonna do, what the steps,
Speaker:what you gonna, you know, um, how are you gonna pull it off, and what
Speaker:are you gonna do if it doesn't?
Speaker:Go the way you wanted to, you know, 'cause then you gotta back everything out.
Speaker:Um, and so I would, you know, do the planning part and then run it
Speaker:by, uh, other people in my group.
Speaker:To break the assumptions.
Speaker:'cause I know when I'm building my plan, I'm making certain assumptions.
Speaker:I just know it right off the bat.
Speaker:You know, it's just, I know that's the way we all operate.
Speaker:Um, and so I'm building my plan and then I have to run it by somebody who will
Speaker:not have my assumptions to find those.
Speaker:That reminds me, when, when we used to do the DR test, the way we
Speaker:would do them is I wasn't allowed to participate in the DR test.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We had to have someone else who was an it, who was an IT person, and then
Speaker:they would follow my documentation.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, and, and I had to pretend to, to be dead.
Speaker:Um, it was always, by the way, you talked about, you know, you got hit by the bus.
Speaker:I always hated the fact that it, like, why can't I like
Speaker:win the lottery and disappear?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Always
Speaker:out to be a bus.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, but yeah, I had to pretend to be dead.
Speaker:And as I, I've, as I've discussed.
Speaker:More than once on the podcast.
Speaker:The, the standard was, um, that, you know, a, a success was we got 100% recovery
Speaker:without having to have Curtis help.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And not once.
Speaker:Did we get that?
Speaker:Because there was always, there was always something that was left out of the
Speaker:documentation, no matter how much you try.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:To,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Well, and that's, I mean, that's why they're, they, they should
Speaker:be viewed as living documents.
Speaker:You should be, um, yeah.
Speaker:Reviewing them.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You should be testing them, you should be updating them.
Speaker:Um, but you know, there have not been many.
Speaker:Places that I've worked in the, in the 30 some years that I've
Speaker:worked in, in doing that kind of stuff, that operated that way.
Speaker:Um, you know, there were companies that I would, you know, in like I
Speaker:can remember one that I got in and if they didn't have anything, and
Speaker:it really pushed really hard to get some kind of a company-wide, uh, Dr.
Speaker:Plan pulled together and so we put a lot of effort into it and we built a
Speaker:document that then was put on a shelf.
Speaker:And it was never looked at it again.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And it's like, well, why do we even do it?
Speaker:Binders
Speaker:has cobwebs and everything over
Speaker:it.
Speaker:Why did we even do it?
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Um, the last company at was one of the better ones for at least attempting to
Speaker:have that be an ongoing part of their, um.
Speaker:Their operational thing.
Speaker:'cause they, they, uh, when an, uh, application or a service was
Speaker:brought in, it had to be identified.
Speaker:Is it business critical?
Speaker:You know, what level of, of protection does it need?
Speaker:And then, um, if it is business critical, they had to have a DR plan and they
Speaker:had to do a, um, table talk one year.
Speaker:And then the following year they actually had to do.
Speaker:Execute the plan, you know?
Speaker:And so, um, a good portion, did
Speaker:they have to do the whole plan
Speaker:for the application?
Speaker:Kinda like where
Speaker:we talked earlier?
Speaker:For
Speaker:the application.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:For the application.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:They had to pretend they had to have a greenfield.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so there was still some weaknesses in that part because, um.
Speaker:Uh, there, there were, there were assumptions made, right?
Speaker:Uh, that okay.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:We're gonna assume that there's a proper infrastructure.
Speaker:We're gonna assume this, we're gonna assume there's DNS, you know,
Speaker:from an application standpoint.
Speaker:Okay, that's fine.
Speaker:But what was never really done, and this is kind of the breakdown, um, on
Speaker:the island, was those assumptions about the infrastructure had never been.
Speaker:Tested or figured out, gone.
Speaker:And that's what caught them in the beginning.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Those assumptions were all underwater and,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The infrastructure part was the part that had broken the worst, if that's,
Speaker:yeah, you know?
Speaker:You know, it's interesting and I just wonder though, like how many times do
Speaker:people make that sort of assumption?
Speaker:Like you kind of make assumptions that power may or may not be available, but
Speaker:the building may or may not be standing, but there are certain things about.
Speaker:The outside world that you just assume will still be up and running.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:As you're trying to work these things through, I guess on an
Speaker:island, things get more complicated.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:In terms of what may or may not be working, like you said, links,
Speaker:communications links, et cetera.
Speaker:But I guess you're right, that is something you have to take into
Speaker:consideration are things outside of your data center that you have to take.
Speaker:Think about
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But I, I was, I thought about this a lot after, you know, in the aftermath
Speaker:of that for the, um, um, for, for some time after being involved in that.
Speaker:And what I experienced there, what was experienced there to me could very
Speaker:well happen in a regional sort of way here on the mainland and, and leave,
Speaker:leave a company in the same boat.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and so, you know, while there are some particularities to being on an
Speaker:island, um, it doesn't mean that if you're not on an island, you don't
Speaker:have to worry about the kinds of assumptions that, that, you know, that
Speaker:turned out to be big problems in their initial, um, you know, recovery attempt.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You.
Speaker:You would think that being, being on an island, they would not assume
Speaker:a connection to the mainland.
Speaker:But a apparently that was the case.
Speaker:That was the case, yeah.
Speaker:Um, and the, the, the difficulty I have when I hear this story,
Speaker:because the, the island situation, what it does is, I think it, it.
Speaker:Brings to the foreground or makes possible many of the worst case scenarios that
Speaker:could happen, that that could happen to a lesser degree on the mainland, but,
Speaker:but to a greater degree on, on an island.
Speaker:Um, but the, the, the real problem here is that many, many of the modern solutions
Speaker:that I would think of to solve these problems are based on using the cloud.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Is problematic when you look at an island situation.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's not as much when you're looking at a mainland situation, but if, for
Speaker:example, you, you, you, you would have to have, you know, internet connectivity,
Speaker:which is why I go back to that.
Speaker:I, I'm really curious to see how this, how the Sea Elon Musk project
Speaker:goes away or go goes forward.
Speaker:And whether or not it's, um, you know, something that can
Speaker:help solve this problem because.
Speaker:Everything that I know that's being done right now has to do, like
Speaker:in the really cool DR perspective has to do with using the cloud.
Speaker:Nobody's talking about, you know, u using physical server DR services or you know,
Speaker:all of the, basically without using the cloud, it's so much harder and with using
Speaker:the cloud, it's so much easier to not just to test an application, but to test
Speaker:the disaster recovery of the entire site.
Speaker:But here's a question for you, Curtis.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Given the island scenario and assuming that your, the cloud
Speaker:was available on the island.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Wouldn't, and say everyone got hit by this, um, isn't the cloud provider in the
Speaker:same situation where they may not have enough resources or they might be down?
Speaker:That's why I say granted, I, I know that you probably are gonna do DR
Speaker:to the mainland in this example or somewhere else, but I'm just wondering
Speaker:if everyone starts doing that.
Speaker:Don't, like cloud provider is just a big.
Speaker:Data, it's just somebody else's server.
Speaker:Yeah, that's,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Agreed.
Speaker:I, I'm just saying that's why the, the, the, the, the island situation is so
Speaker:problematic because I, I completely agree with you that I, if it was, let's just
Speaker:say this, this was a pretty small island.
Speaker:Let's say it's a bigger island and there is a cloud provider.
Speaker:'cause there, there wasn't, I, I don't think cloud.
Speaker:Stuff available on the island.
Speaker:Uh, if you, if it was available, I wouldn't use that as your DR site.
Speaker:I would use the mainland.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so, because Yes, you, because you're completely right if, if your data center's
Speaker:underwater and you're on an island quite ly their data center's underwater.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, the, um, it reminds me, I used to, you know, manage data
Speaker:centers in Delaware and we had a.
Speaker:Our offsite vaulting company.
Speaker:It wasn't Iron Mountain, it was this local company.
Speaker:And what they had was they had a World War II bunker, um, like, like bomb shelter.
Speaker:And that's where they stored tapes for people, which sounds really
Speaker:good until a hurricane comes.
Speaker:And so whenever a hurricane was on its way to Delaware, we had to pay money
Speaker:to have all of our tapes moved out of the bunker and up to the second floor.
Speaker:So that if our data, if our data center was underwater, our tapes
Speaker:also were not underwater anyway.
Speaker:But yeah, I, I just, it's just the, the island situation is frustrating.
Speaker:Um, and.
Speaker:Uh, so any further thoughts?
Speaker:Um, Ron on the, because we haven't even talked about the recovery yet, and I,
Speaker:I'm just gonna have to have you back 'cause I, I find this solu, I find
Speaker:this discussion incredibly fascinating.
Speaker:You're, you know, you're, you're smart.
Speaker:You know what you're doing, you're articulate, uh, and, and you
Speaker:know, I'm, I'm super glad that we, that we finally have you on.
Speaker:Can you think, uh, so what I'm gonna do is we're gonna with, on this podcast,
Speaker:we'll sort of round out the discussion on.
Speaker:Everything sort of almost not recovery, like all of the
Speaker:things that just frustrated you being able to start a recovery.
Speaker:Can you think of anything else that falls into that category that happened to you?
Speaker:Well, I was just trying to go back.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:I mean there were no Snickers bars available, for example.
Speaker:Um, well, I was just gonna ask you about how it was on the island itself.
Speaker:I know you had a job to do, trying to get.
Speaker:The company back up and running, but I'm sure there is also.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Well, okay on that.
Speaker:Um, so I need to go back to see the island, um, because I didn't really
Speaker:get to see the island, you know?
Speaker:Um, it was an interesting, it was an interesting journey.
Speaker:We, um, we flew down in a corporate jet, right?
Speaker:That was a trip in and of itself.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:that must have been cool.
Speaker:Was that cool?
Speaker:That cool?
Speaker:Just tell me.
Speaker:That was cool.
Speaker:Very cool.
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:but I'll tell you what.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It, it.
Speaker:Spit me in the butt because I didn't have to go through TSA
Speaker:or any that on the way down.
Speaker:And so I forgot that I had put a couple of things in my bag, and when I was
Speaker:leaving the island, I had to actually flag commercial TSA and, and it was,
Speaker:it was fruit and it, like they take it out and you can't take it with you.
Speaker:So, um, but um, it was, it was weird.
Speaker:You know, when we landed, uh, you know, at that time, this was very
Speaker:early after the, the, um, the init, the hurricane itself, right?
Speaker:And so, um, limited flights in and out, you had to, um, you had to, they, you had
Speaker:to, basically, they had to request and were given this tiny window to land in.
Speaker:And so, boy, they had to make sure they made it on time and all that.
Speaker:Um, they had a number of.
Speaker:People with the company that they were relocating to a facility on the mainland
Speaker:so that they could get online and do work in helping to bring the site back.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Uh, they couldn't work locally and so they were waiting when we landed and you
Speaker:know, we got off and they put us in a shuttle and then took us and there wasn't.
Speaker:I grew up in Montana and Montana in the winter, when you look out,
Speaker:um, you got the evergreens, but if there's not an evergreen, it's brown.
Speaker:It's brown, right?
Speaker:I mean, there's, there's no green, um, there.
Speaker:Um, and so this looked a lot like Montana in the winter without the snow.
Speaker:I mean, it was just.
Speaker:Brown.
Speaker:There wasn't any leaves, any green anywhere.
Speaker:It had been stripped bare.
Speaker:So it was weird seeing that.
Speaker:Oh, because it had been stripped from, from bear, yeah, from the hurricane.
Speaker:Gotcha.
Speaker:The wind just
Speaker:stripped it off.
Speaker:One of the guys that, that he, he'd worked at the facility, I
Speaker:forget, he's been like 20 years.
Speaker:He said, I'm doing this commute for the last 20 years.
Speaker:I didn't know there were houses down there on the side of the road, you
Speaker:know, because it was so lush and green, you couldn't see beyond, oh.
Speaker:And he says, I'm seeing stuff that I didn't even know was there.
Speaker:But anyways, um, and then we get there and, you know, there's, they
Speaker:basically put us up in conference room.
Speaker:They turned conference rooms into, um, um.
Speaker:Just, uh, dorm, right?
Speaker:And we had, um, um, they had these little air mattresses and, um, I brought, uh,
Speaker:they told us, you know, bring a bag and, and so I brought like a sleeping
Speaker:bag, you know, change of clothes.
Speaker:Uh, and, uh, pretty much spent, well, the entire time I was
Speaker:there, um, I spent it on.
Speaker:On the facility.
Speaker:'cause there was nothing to go, no place to really go.
Speaker:Um, for, for the locals, you know, there were long lines for everything.
Speaker:Um, and so it just didn't seem right to go getting long lines for those people.
Speaker:Um, they, they were providing us with, um, you know, the food, um, and it was
Speaker:a lot of, um, chicken and rice, but, um, you know, you'll survive on, on, on it.
Speaker:So they, they took the, the company took very.
Speaker:Good care I thought of, of the people.
Speaker:Um, and they also were taking real good care of, uh, local workers, um, who could
Speaker:not come back in, um, to the facility, you know, just because they, they weren't,
Speaker:their stuff wasn't yet recovered, you know, because there's some manufacturing
Speaker:goes on there, and so they weren't.
Speaker:It's ready to do manufacturing.
Speaker:Um, but they took care of 'em.
Speaker:They shipped in, um, brought in pallets, pallets full of, of, uh, bulk food
Speaker:and whatnot and, and, uh, had workers come in, you know, and they just
Speaker:basically parceled 'em out and helped supplemented a lot of their stuff.
Speaker:So I thought that was really good.
Speaker:Their, their response overall in taking care of their, their, their local
Speaker:employees, that I thought was really well, and, you know, and, and they did
Speaker:good by us as far as, as, you know.
Speaker:Under the circumstances, you know, we didn't go hungry and we, you know,
Speaker:we had a place to sleep, but it was.
Speaker:FI was there for almost two weeks and it was pretty much, um, you know, 12, 14,
Speaker:16 hour days in the, in the beginning.
Speaker:And then it tapered down after about the first week.
Speaker:Um, and then it was, we were down to sort of eight hour days.
Speaker:But then you just.
Speaker:Sitting around a lot of time.
Speaker:And so since there was nothing to do, we just worked
Speaker:like, what else?
Speaker:What else do you do?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:When you're in that situation, you know?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, subsequent you're not
Speaker:watching Netflix.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Subsequent teams that came down, um, by, by that time, um, they were
Speaker:actually coming down on commercial, you know, 'cause commercial,
Speaker:um, flights had started to pick.
Speaker:Back up as they had, um, kind of cleared stuff up in that.
Speaker:Uh, and then they had, um, rented out hotels, uh, space for
Speaker:them and were shuttling them.
Speaker:Um, so they weren't staying on the, on the, on the, the campus itself.
Speaker:And, but so, but it was kind of fun in one sense.
Speaker:Um, I did a, um, the only exercise I could really get there was just a lot of
Speaker:walking and I walked around all over the campus just to look at the damage and,
Speaker:you know, different parts of it had had.
Speaker:You know, some of it unscathed.
Speaker:Um, the particular building that the, the data center B was in, um, was one of
Speaker:the oldest buildings there on the campus.
Speaker:And so, um, it, it's does, you know, not surprising that it was the
Speaker:one that suffered the most damage.
Speaker:So, um, and, uh, but then it was kind of, you know, it was a, the small group
Speaker:of us that were, were forced together.
Speaker:People that you'd never met before or didn't know were all kind of
Speaker:forced together to, to work together.
Speaker:And that I found that was fun.
Speaker:That was interesting.
Speaker:You know, you get to, you get to know people and it, did you
Speaker:have any.
Speaker:Did you have any language barriers?
Speaker:'cause I, I'm guessing you don't speak the language of the locals.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:But, but, um, you know, um, everybody within the facility
Speaker:is, is fluent, uh, English.
Speaker:It's okay.
Speaker:You know, because it's a, it's, um, a mainland company, you know, headquarters.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Um, so, so they're all, they're all bilingual.
Speaker:Um, which puts them way up the ladder on than me, you know?
Speaker:Um, I'm always, I'm always, yeah.
Speaker:Um, you know, my hat off to anybody that speaks more than one
Speaker:language as far as I'm concerned.
Speaker:Um, absolutely.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, persona,
Speaker:how many you got?
Speaker:Persona.
Speaker:I can understand other languages.
Speaker:I don't necessarily speak a.
Speaker:Still, that's still better.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So yeah, so it was a very, very interesting experience.
Speaker:Um, overall, I'll tell you, you know, it, it was, uh, not that, not
Speaker:that I wanna have to do it again, but 'cause of the circumstances.
Speaker:But
Speaker:you got to really do sort of the worst case scenario of what
Speaker:a lot of us, um, prepare for.
Speaker:Prepare for.
Speaker:And uh, that's why I really wanted to have you on Yeah.
Speaker:And, and talk to you.
Speaker:And by the way, we're gonna have you back 'cause you, you've got a lot of
Speaker:institutional knowledge up there of what it's like to actually do this
Speaker:in, you know, in the real world.
Speaker:Um, so we're definitely gonna have you back, but, uh, I'm gonna end
Speaker:this one now because we try to keep these around 45 minutes or so.
Speaker:We're definitely gonna have you back.
Speaker:Would that be alright?
Speaker:Oh, sure, sure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, having spent most of my career preparing for disasters and,
Speaker:and running a couple of, uh, of, you know, tests, uh, to actually be.
Speaker:Be able to participate in a full on recovery of a, of a facility.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That was a, a, a highlight, you know, I mean, again, if you don't want those
Speaker:kinds of things to happen, but to be able to be a part of one was, yeah.
Speaker:That's something that I, I'm really proud of.
Speaker:This was fascinating.
Speaker:I I, I, it's interesting right at the end there, we got the image of you on a, on
Speaker:an air mattress with a sleeping bag bag.
Speaker:Uh, that, that, that, that added like a whole, I didn't even, I didn't even
Speaker:think about that part of like, you know, that you needed a place to sleep
Speaker:and those places weren't Exactly, uh, in the, they were in short supply.
Speaker:Anyway, so, um, thanks so much for, for coming on.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Thanks, persona.
Speaker:Thanks Curtis.
Speaker:Thank you, Ron.
Speaker:I, yeah, pleasure.
Speaker:Like Curtis said, I just have that image, image of you in an air mattress
Speaker:with a bowl of chicken and rice with, uh, lights flickering, kind
Speaker:of like an apocalypse like scene.
Speaker:And the data center slowly coming back, online's like Jurassic Park almost.
Speaker:I know that system.
Speaker:All right, and with that, I wanna thank the listeners for your attention and,
Speaker:uh, and, and listening all the time.
Speaker:That is a wrap.