hi, and welcome to Backup Central's Restore It All podcast.
W. Curtis Preston:I'm a host w Curtis Preston, aka Mr.
W. Curtis Preston:Backup, and I have with me my pedantry prognosticator Prasanna Malaiyandi
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So wait, what am I?
W. Curtis Preston:Pedantry.
W. Curtis Preston:It.
W. Curtis Preston:It's like, uh, it's like pedantic.
W. Curtis Preston:It's like pedantry.
W. Curtis Preston:You know, pedantry.
W. Curtis Preston:Is it Pedantry?
W. Curtis Preston:Pedant.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I
W. Curtis Preston:it's, yeah, it's pedantry.
W. Curtis Preston:No, it's pedantry.
W. Curtis Preston:Pedantry Prognosticator Prasanna Malaiyandi
Prasanna Malaiyandi:how many more PS can he throw in there?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:What's going on, Curtis?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You doing okay?
W. Curtis Preston:cause we're doing, we're doing, we're doing, we're
W. Curtis Preston:doing some, some pedantry today.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, we are
Prasanna Malaiyandi:very specific.
W. Curtis Preston:very specific.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, pedantry is defined as the excessive concern with minor details and rules.
W. Curtis Preston:And we're arguing over two words that many people consider to be synonyms.
W. Curtis Preston:And we're going, no, they're not.
W. Curtis Preston:They are not the same.
W. Curtis Preston:Last week we talked about backup.
W. Curtis Preston:This week we're gonna talk about archive.
W. Curtis Preston:This is of course, a continuation of our backup to basic series,
W. Curtis Preston:which is, um, referring to my book, modern Data Protection.
W. Curtis Preston:Little picture of there.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, uh, which you can get for free at ebook version by going to druva.com/ebook.
W. Curtis Preston:It is my latest O'Reilly book, although I'm thinking about writing a new one.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, the, uh, we'll see, we'll see if I actually pull it off, but, uh, this
W. Curtis Preston:last one took 10 years . So , we'll
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Well, well, well, let's be honest though,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Curtis, it took you 10 years from the first time you thought about it
Prasanna Malaiyandi:to when it got published, but from when you actually started writing.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah, it was about what, like three months
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It was three months for you to write the book.
W. Curtis Preston:It was all in the treadmill.
W. Curtis Preston:Remember?
W. Curtis Preston:It was, uh, it was a, it was a, uh,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:of the pandemic.
W. Curtis Preston:yeah, pandemic project.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, the, uh, it was a Preston Pandemic project.
W. Curtis Preston:Speaking of , the piece, but it, um, I did it on the treadmill, used a dragon,
W. Curtis Preston:uh, professional, a big fan of that.
W. Curtis Preston:I've used it for many, many years.
W. Curtis Preston:And, um, and then immediately put it into Google Docs and then let you look at it.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:You are one of my many technical
Prasanna Malaiyandi:reviewers.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Technical reviewers.
W. Curtis Preston:What were you gonna say?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah, no.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah, I was gonna say that there were quite a few people reviewing, right.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Your work, but.
W. Curtis Preston:some, some people did just like one chapter, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Um, I had other people, I did other people that work for competitors.
W. Curtis Preston:And by the way, I'll, you know, since I'm talking about that, I'll mention that.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, I work for Druva, uh, Prasanna works for Zoom.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, this is not a podcast of either company.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, the opinions that you hear are ours.
W. Curtis Preston:And, um, you know, but because I work for Druva, obviously a competitor in
W. Curtis Preston:the space or a vendor in the space, I wanted to make sure that I wasn't,
W. Curtis Preston:uh, I was trying really hard not to weight the book on Druva's behalf.
W. Curtis Preston:So I had some people that work for, uh, a couple of the vendors,
W. Curtis Preston:uh, competitors that we run into.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, Uh, do a technical review.
W. Curtis Preston:But, uh, also, uh, please rate us at, uh, by, go to your favorite, uh, podcast
W. Curtis Preston:or scroll down to the stars and give us all the stars and comments and whatnot.
W. Curtis Preston:And if you wanna join a conversation, just reach out to me, w Curtis
W. Curtis Preston:Preston gmail, or at WC preston on Twitter and we'll make it happen.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so we're gonna talk about archive.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Actually before you, before we get to that, I think for
Prasanna Malaiyandi:people who may not want to come on the podcast because they're unsure or don't
Prasanna Malaiyandi:wanna spend the time, I think it's also.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It's important that they could reach out to either of us on
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Twitter and start a conversation.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Right.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You don't have to come on the podcast, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:We wanna engage with our listeners.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:If you have questions, if you want us to talk about a topic right, that
Prasanna Malaiyandi:you're interested in, let us know.
W. Curtis Preston:Absolutely.
W. Curtis Preston:Absolutely.
W. Curtis Preston:If you just wanna write me an email and say, Prasanna sucks, um, that is fine.
W. Curtis Preston:And, um,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Uh, sure,
W. Curtis Preston:no one would ever do that.
W. Curtis Preston:You're too nice.
W. Curtis Preston:Everybody likes you.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so , right?
W. Curtis Preston:So last, the last week's episode, we talked about the definition of backup,
W. Curtis Preston:and that's really, really important.
W. Curtis Preston:One of the reasons why it was really, really important is
W. Curtis Preston:because it's not an archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Archive is something very closely related to backup and people talk
W. Curtis Preston:a lot about it, and archive is actually something a little bit.
W. Curtis Preston:Harder to define.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, but, and, and also because again, uh, it's used, you know,
W. Curtis Preston:as a, as we mentioned, it's used a lot in popular culture, right?
W. Curtis Preston:I think about, when I think about the, the pop culture understanding of the word
W. Curtis Preston:archive, I think about the final scene in the original Raiders of the Lost Arc.
W. Curtis Preston:Do, do you remember the final scene.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:is this the one where they are
Prasanna Malaiyandi:in the
W. Curtis Preston:They, killed all the Nazis.
W. Curtis Preston:Remember they killed all the Nazis.
W. Curtis Preston:And then they, and so they got the, they got the arc, right?
W. Curtis Preston:They got the arc at a covenant.
W. Curtis Preston:then what?
W. Curtis Preston:You remember the very final scene?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I don't remember the very final scene.
W. Curtis Preston:They're like, well, somebody doing something with this ark.
W. Curtis Preston:And they're, oh yeah, yeah, we got, we got our best people on it.
W. Curtis Preston:And they show them hammering it shut into a wooden, um, Crate and
W. Curtis Preston:then putting that crate into this gigantic warehouse with thousands of
W. Curtis Preston:other crates that look just like it.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, I also think about like cold case.
W. Curtis Preston:I dunno if you've ever watched Cold Case, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Where they're just combing through the archives, they're combing through these
W. Curtis Preston:old cases and they're just boxes of stuff.
W. Curtis Preston:But by the way, we're, we're gonna come back to that cold case thing
W. Curtis Preston:because I think it's actually the way they archive cases is actually.
W. Curtis Preston:Pretty close to what I think of as one of the types of archives.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and people think, and people therefore think of any old data
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:as an archive.
W. Curtis Preston:And so they use the phrase, which, you know, makes my spine tingle.
W. Curtis Preston:They used the phrase, I'm gonna archive a backup.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, that is not a phrase.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, You know,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You know what?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:We should print stickers and if you want a sticker, let us know.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:archive is not backup.
W. Curtis Preston:Archive is not bag up and you can't archive a backup.
W. Curtis Preston:Now let me, here, here.
W. Curtis Preston:I like analogies.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, grape juice.
W. Curtis Preston:Is grape juice.
W. Curtis Preston:Everybody knows what grape juice is like Welch is grape juice, right?
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know if you're outside of the states that that might not be,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It's a
W. Curtis Preston:you know what grape juice is, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, you know what wine is?
W. Curtis Preston:Wine is also grape juice,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:yep,
W. Curtis Preston:but it's made for a different purpose and you u and and
W. Curtis Preston:it's made with a different process.
W. Curtis Preston:Both involves putting grape juice in a bottle and leaving it
W. Curtis Preston:there for long periods of time.
W. Curtis Preston:One is made slightly different than the other, and as a result,
W. Curtis Preston:you get a very different result.
W. Curtis Preston:One will get you drunk, one will not, right?
W. Curtis Preston:You can't take a bottle of Welch's grape juice, set it on a shelf for, you know,
W. Curtis Preston:five years and expect to get drunk on it.
W. Curtis Preston:Okay?
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and the same result, you can't open a bottle of Chardonnay
W. Curtis Preston:and give it to a five year old
Prasanna Malaiyandi:you could, but depending on what country you're in.
W. Curtis Preston:The results will be unpredictable.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, there's a funny, there's a funny, um, ticker that I, I look at, her
W. Curtis Preston:name's Miss Sutter Southern and she's this, um, lessons in teaching
W. Curtis Preston:that they're never gonna tell you.
W. Curtis Preston:She had, it's very, she has all these cute little stories and she had this, this.
W. Curtis Preston:This dispute in like kindergarten or first grade or something, and they, they
W. Curtis Preston:had a bet and, and the winning bet, what was going to the person that won the bet
W. Curtis Preston:or the loser had to bring in the other person, one of his sparkling waters.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Okay.
W. Curtis Preston:So he brought in sparkling water and then the next day
W. Curtis Preston:the kid was acting a little goofy and wanting to go pee a lot and everything.
W. Curtis Preston:And then, uh, she looked in the can and it was a, it was a truly,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh,
W. Curtis Preston:his mom stored her trulys right next to which again,
W. Curtis Preston:if you're not in the States, that is a carbonated alcoholic beverage
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:And she, uh, uh, she's like, not my fault.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, So, yeah, so old backups don't magically turn into archives.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, they're just really old backups.
W. Curtis Preston:So here is my definition of an archive, some of which will sound familiar.
W. Curtis Preston:If you listened to last week's episode.
W. Curtis Preston:An archive is a copy of data stored in a separate location.
W. Curtis Preston:So far we're the same, made to serve as a reference copy and stored with
W. Curtis Preston:enough metadata to find the data in question without knowing where it came.
W. Curtis Preston:So that's very different sounding than, we'll, we'll cover those
W. Curtis Preston:phrases, just like what we did.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, the, um, so what differentiates an archive from a backup is why you made it
W. Curtis Preston:and, and how you're gonna store it, right?
W. Curtis Preston:So, um, and again, I, I, I was trying to come up with a definition.
W. Curtis Preston:That would fit many different types of archives.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so, so let's talk about, let's talk about a couple of
W. Curtis Preston:different types of archives.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, one, the first type of archive I remember having anything to do
W. Curtis Preston:with was actually, uh, in my early
W. Curtis Preston:legato days.
W. Curtis Preston:Remember Lego.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yes, I do.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:by the way.
W. Curtis Preston:You know, I always thought about, by the way, are, I don't know how much
W. Curtis Preston:musical, um, you know, training you have, but what does legato mean in music?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh,
W. Curtis Preston:It's the opposite of staccato.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:
Speaker:Chicago's fast, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Well, staccato is,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:you know, like short, short burst.
W. Curtis Preston:Ligato means like long and slow.
W. Curtis Preston:Like I've never understood
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Why you call it that?
W. Curtis Preston:Why they called it Ligado when that means like, slow it down.
W. Curtis Preston:I've never quite understood that.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, , it's the opposite of staccato.
W. Curtis Preston:They should have called it staccato networker anyway.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so yeah, so, so what they had and other backup products had, they
W. Curtis Preston:had this concept of an archive.
W. Curtis Preston:And what they would do is you would identify a bunch of files.
W. Curtis Preston:They would go in this archive.
W. Curtis Preston:They would put it in this archive, which meant they sort
W. Curtis Preston:of stored them all together.
W. Curtis Preston:Generally speaking, this puts it into something like, or akin to like a tarball.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, obviously networker didn't use tar, but, but it's akin to that.
W. Curtis Preston:And then you had to give it some metadata allow you to find.
W. Curtis Preston:Again in the future.
W. Curtis Preston:So you would put a bunch of stuff together and you'd say, this is the
W. Curtis Preston:Albatross 2023 project, so that when it's.
W. Curtis Preston:10 years from now, you all you would need to remember is the name of the project or
W. Curtis Preston:whatever it is that you, you put it there.
W. Curtis Preston:You'd have to go, well, we need, we need, remember, we need
W. Curtis Preston:the Albatross project of 2023.
W. Curtis Preston:You would do a retrieve.
W. Curtis Preston:By the way, that's what you do with archives is you retrieve
W. Curtis Preston:them, you don't restore them.
W. Curtis Preston:We defined what a restore was last week, and when you do that retrieve, you get
W. Curtis Preston:all of the stuff that was put in that box.
W. Curtis Preston:This, I liken it to the cold case
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah, I was just thinking about the cold case, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You put everything, all evidence associated with the case in a box
Prasanna Malaiyandi:and you put it in the shelf, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And then when you wanna retrieve it, you go, you find the box, you pull
Prasanna Malaiyandi:the box out, you open the box, and it has everything that you needed.
W. Curtis Preston:and the box is named by the name of the case, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Probably the name of the, the decedent by the.
W. Curtis Preston:the deceased.
W. Curtis Preston:Deceased.
W. Curtis Preston:You learn so much grammar on this show.
W. Curtis Preston:Deceased is a state.
W. Curtis Preston:The decedent is a person, the decedent is deceased.
W. Curtis Preston:Well, but they, they, it's just in tv.
W. Curtis Preston:They often say the deceased and they, they're referring to a
W. Curtis Preston:person, and I'm like, deceased is an adjective, decedent is a noun.
W. Curtis Preston:Anyway,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:know what?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I bet you, so I watch a lot of N C I S.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I think they wrong on the show.
W. Curtis Preston:Oh, they're wrong.
W. Curtis Preston:They're, I don't know.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know if I've ever seen a show that gets that word correct.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Because even the medical examiner, he always says the deceased,
W. Curtis Preston:yeah, it's not the deceased, it's the decedent.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, also, what do you do to an animal?
W. Curtis Preston:Uh,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:you kill it.
W. Curtis Preston:If an animal, if an animal is dead and you're trying
W. Curtis Preston:to figure out why, what do you do?
W. Curtis Preston:You perform a
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Autopsy.
W. Curtis Preston:ne.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Autopsy
W. Curtis Preston:auto, you do autopsies on people you do NEPs on,
W. Curtis Preston:which is really just Latin for dead,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Hmm.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, but um, yeah, the decedent,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Okay.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So
W. Curtis Preston:patan crap that Curtis knows.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, by the way, also, uh, when you say, uh, I'm nauseous, that means
W. Curtis Preston:that you're sickening to look at it.
W. Curtis Preston:Doesn't mean that you're, what you mean to say is you're nauseated.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Hmm.
W. Curtis Preston:Are, are you really ? Are you picking up,
W. Curtis Preston:are you
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I'm not gonna remember any of these things.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You're just gonna have
W. Curtis Preston:That's right.
W. Curtis Preston:That's right.
W. Curtis Preston:All right, so to serve as a reference, right?
W. Curtis Preston:So we talked about the stuff in the box.
W. Curtis Preston:Can you think about different types of archives?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I was thinking
W. Curtis Preston:
Speaker:talked about one already.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Well, and, and I think the one I was thinking about was very similar,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:so it's, you talked about, okay, you're done with the project.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Another case, maybe you're done with an application or
Prasanna Malaiyandi:with an entire infrastructure,
W. Curtis Preston:yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You're moving from on premises to the cloud, but
Prasanna Malaiyandi:you don't wanna get rid of all that on-prem data, but you want to archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Mm-hmm.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And say, okay, all of this is related to the Oracle application
Prasanna Malaiyandi:or anything else, and keep it in a box in case later, you need to retrieve it.
W. Curtis Preston:Oracle version X from 2022.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Et cetera.
W. Curtis Preston:Um,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I was also thinking about like projects.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:This is very similar projects.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I, I always think about like drug research, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Because drug research, you keep that around forever.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:But not all the time is it actively being used.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And so typically they end up taking all of their research, archiving it, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So it's still available.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And then when they have something that comes up or some issues, they can
Prasanna Malaiyandi:always go retrieve it and either do investigations on it, do additional
Prasanna Malaiyandi:research on it, et cetera, based on that.
W. Curtis Preston:Exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and so that is, those are all different examples
W. Curtis Preston:of one type of an archive.
W. Curtis Preston:There's another, there's, there's two others that they're closely related,
W. Curtis Preston:but, um, I actually, I think one is type of the other, but the other
W. Curtis Preston:phrase, and you said it already in the podcast, Is what do you remember?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I don't remember what I say on these things.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I don't even remember what I said 30 seconds ago.
W. Curtis Preston:minutes
W. Curtis Preston:ago.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:did.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:What did I say?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I, my memory's really bad.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh, email archives.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:There we
W. Curtis Preston:Email archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Right?
W. Curtis Preston:So what's an email archive now?
W. Curtis Preston:This one.
W. Curtis Preston:This one really sort of bridges like it's.
W. Curtis Preston:But, but I'm gonna accept the term email archive, cuz generally speaking, archives
W. Curtis Preston:for old stuff that isn't used anymore, email archive is a little bit different.
W. Curtis Preston:This is why, this is why the, the serve is a reference copy,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:right?
W. Curtis Preston:So email archive might have e Well, if it's a proper sort
W. Curtis Preston:of normal email archive, it'll have emails that came in today,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:right?
W. Curtis Preston:It will also have emails that came in seven years ago, depending
W. Curtis Preston:on what our retention is.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and why are we storing those emails,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:This is mainly for compliance, legal, issues, such
Prasanna Malaiyandi:as you get an eDiscovery case, or you want to go back and figure out was
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Curtis really stealing money from the company and who was he communicating
Prasanna Malaiyandi:with and all the rest, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So
W. Curtis Preston:Those are all correct answers, not the answer I was looking for.
W. Curtis Preston:Do you know what the answer I was looking for was to serve as a reference?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Hmm.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:We, it's the reason we, you know, we're still backing up that email server, right?
W. Curtis Preston:If you have an email server, or if you had 365, you're still backing up 365, but,
W. Curtis Preston:but you also might have an email archive of 365 or Gmail or you know, inbox,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And I think one of the cases, just going back
Prasanna Malaiyandi:to that for reference, right, it's with the case of a backup.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:If you're doing a once a day backup during the day, someone might have
Prasanna Malaiyandi:gotten an email, deleted the email.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:When you back it up, it's not in the backup.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:in a backup, but it will be in a proper email archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Every email that comes in and every email that goes out, will, goes,
W. Curtis Preston:goes in that email archive, right?
W. Curtis Preston:So it's much better for compliance purposes.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so again, going with examples, so Google Workspace has Google Vault.
W. Curtis Preston:It is an email archive for Google for Gmail.
W. Curtis Preston:Okay.
W. Curtis Preston:Guess what?
W. Curtis Preston:It's not.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:
Speaker:Now back up for Gmail.
W. Curtis Preston:It's not a backup or Gmail.
W. Curtis Preston:It's got all the same stuff, right?
W. Curtis Preston:It's got every email.
W. Curtis Preston:In fact, it's got more based on your thing.
W. Curtis Preston:Just a minute ago, it's got more than a backup would have,
W. Curtis Preston:assuming that, you know, somebody actually cleared out their, um,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Inbox.
W. Curtis Preston:recycle.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah, but I guess the question is walking through this, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So you have your archive, you have the retrieve,
W. Curtis Preston:Mm-hmm.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Could I not use the retrieve even though it has more than what may
Prasanna Malaiyandi:have ever existed at a point in time, been a plausible point in
Prasanna Malaiyandi:time, if that's what I'm looking for.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I not satisfy bringing data back.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I know it's not a restore because it was never to a valid point in
Prasanna Malaiyandi:time that existed, but could I still use that to get back data?
W. Curtis Preston:I would shorten your answer to, can I
W. Curtis Preston:use an archive to do a restore?
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:So, um, let me ask, let me ask you this question.
W. Curtis Preston:Can I use your Tesla to haul fertilizer?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yes, but I wouldn't recommend it or I
Prasanna Malaiyandi:wouldn't want that to happen.
W. Curtis Preston:And it, and it would be highly inefficient, right?
W. Curtis Preston:I could only put like, you know, a certain number of bags.
W. Curtis Preston:Hopefully we did it in bags.
W. Curtis Preston:God forbid I have raw you know, and, you know, I gotta, I got a
W. Curtis Preston:front end loader with fertilizer and we're gonna use your Tesla.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, but you gotta like, it's like, no, you don't have a hatchback.
W. Curtis Preston:You gotta, you have a, yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so the answer is kind of,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It can be, but not intended.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:with a giant butt.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:reminds me of, uh, Peewee Herman's big adventure.
W. Curtis Preston:Everybody I know has a big, but anyway, it was the, it was the, the
W. Curtis Preston:naughtiest line in that G-rated movie.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, the, um, and I'm five years old, so I still remember
W. Curtis Preston:that line from 40 years ago.
W. Curtis Preston:Anyway, um, he, um, Sorry, I totally, I totally
Prasanna Malaiyandi:So you can use an archive for a
W. Curtis Preston:will be really, really difficult to accomplish
W. Curtis Preston:the same function, right?
W. Curtis Preston:So here's, and, and you, you, you alluded to it earlier, the, the
W. Curtis Preston:number one problem is, well, sort of two problems, is it's not designed
W. Curtis Preston:to do that, which means you can't say, you can't say to a pure archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Give me all the emails that were in my inbox yesterday.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:You can't do that.
W. Curtis Preston:You can say, give me all the emails that were sent to me in the last
W. Curtis Preston:five years or in the last year.
W. Curtis Preston:Now, if you've got emails in your inbox that are from six months ago and you
W. Curtis Preston:say, give me all the emails from the last month, you're gonna get all the
W. Curtis Preston:emails from the last month, including all the ones that you've deleted.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and if, if you do it, you know, for the last,
W. Curtis Preston:and, and if you've got emails that are in your inbox that you're keeping
W. Curtis Preston:around, you know, a lot of people keep mail emails from forever, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Not.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I'm an
W. Curtis Preston:And if you owe your inbox zero, you know, whatever,
W. Curtis Preston:uh, I'm like inbox 4k, but whatever.
W. Curtis Preston:So, um, the um, You, you can, you, you, again, assuming it's a pure
W. Curtis Preston:archive product, you cannot restore, you cannot do a point in time restore
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
W. Curtis Preston:of your inbox.
W. Curtis Preston:And also many archive systems can't put the folders back, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Because again, it's not worried about that.
W. Curtis Preston:It's not it's purpose.
W. Curtis Preston:It's purpose is to be able to find the one email where Prasanna said naughty words,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I, I, I think we should highlight, I think we should drill a little bit
Prasanna Malaiyandi:deeper for folks point in time, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:I think that's sometimes not understood.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Do you wanna sort of walk through
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Well, it's last week we talked about backup.
W. Curtis Preston:Backup is to restore something.
W. Curtis Preston:Two, a single point in time.
W. Curtis Preston:That's all we're saying.
W. Curtis Preston:When you do a restore, remember I said you do the, let me just, uh, what did I say?
W. Curtis Preston:I, I've got it here.
W. Curtis Preston:Let's see here.
W. Curtis Preston:It's right at the end of my.
W. Curtis Preston:Here it is a restore.
W. Curtis Preston:Returns a single thing to a single point in time.
W. Curtis Preston:That's it.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yes, you can do multiple restores, but each
W. Curtis Preston:restore restores a single thing, a single database, a single file,
W. Curtis Preston:a single file system, a single server to a single point in time.
W. Curtis Preston:I want this server to the way it looked yesterday.
W. Curtis Preston:You cannot do a point in time restore, as it's called, to
W. Curtis Preston:using a pure archive system.
W. Curtis Preston:Okay?
W. Curtis Preston:Again, I am well aware that there are products like that
W. Curtis Preston:do both with a single copy.
W. Curtis Preston:I'm fine with that.
W. Curtis Preston:Okay.
W. Curtis Preston:, um, it's just a pure archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Cannot do a point in time restore, right?
W. Curtis Preston:It messes up all the folders.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and more than likely what you will get is way too much stuff to be useful.
W. Curtis Preston:Okay.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, it also doesn't understand the concept of red and not red, right?
W. Curtis Preston:It, it is just gonna put all the, all the emails.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:It doesn't care.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so that's what I was talking about to serve.
W. Curtis Preston:Oh, so there's a third.
W. Curtis Preston:A third type of archive is um, uh, an active archive, which is really just,
W. Curtis Preston:uh, and we've had guys from the active archive on the podcast where basically
W. Curtis Preston:this is the idea that I'm going to keep.
W. Curtis Preston:Actively use data in the primary file system.
W. Curtis Preston:And I'm gonna keep lesser used data out in this other secondary file system.
W. Curtis Preston:Maybe object storage.
W. Curtis Preston:Maybe tape, maybe object storage on tape, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Maybe S3 or act or um, glacier or whatever.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, it's sort of this two tiered
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It's like a tiered file system
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah, it's like a tiered file system.
W. Curtis Preston:And the idea is that why would you do that?
W. Curtis Preston:And cost is really the only.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, reason for that.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, by moving the, the lesser used data out of the primary file system,
W. Curtis Preston:we reduced the size of the file system.
W. Curtis Preston:We also reduced the pain it takes to back it up,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Well, I think another benefit too with those
Prasanna Malaiyandi:types of active archive systems is.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Sometimes people don't know what needs to be archived, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:We all like to think, oh, it's just gonna be based on files or what's most
Prasanna Malaiyandi:frequently used, but a lot of times people don't know, and that's been the challenge
Prasanna Malaiyandi:with storage systems, which is why primary storage is always like continuously grown.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:But now with these techniques, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Where to an end user, it's seamless.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:The fact that data is moving off to archive storage,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:lower cost storage, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:That's seamless to the end user, but helps the storage admin
Prasanna Malaiyandi:save significantly on costs.
W. Curtis Preston:Exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:So when they go, when they go to retrieve, again, there's that word when
W. Curtis Preston:they go to retrieve a file that hasn't been archived, it just automatically
W. Curtis Preston:comes back and it, you know, it just creates, you know, you just get a
W. Curtis Preston:little, little hourglass for, you know, a few seconds depending on the size.
W. Curtis Preston:You just make sure you train
Prasanna Malaiyandi:The people.
W. Curtis Preston:educate your users so that they know that when
W. Curtis Preston:they get that little hourglass, they don't just start rebooting
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah,
W. Curtis Preston:Or if they do, they reboot and they're like, oh, I fixed it.
W. Curtis Preston:Because now it's restored.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Or retrieved.
W. Curtis Preston:We wanna talk about the phrase in the definition stored with
W. Curtis Preston:additional metadata, a backup.
W. Curtis Preston:Typically doesn't have a lot of metadata associated with, other than
W. Curtis Preston:name a file, date and directory.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:the stuff we talked about in the backup episode.
W. Curtis Preston:yeah, exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, typically an archive is going to have more metadata.
W. Curtis Preston:We talked about some of it already, like project name.
W. Curtis Preston:If it's an email archive, it's gonna have a ton of metadata.
W. Curtis Preston:It's gonna have the, the, you know, all the metadata associated with the email,
W. Curtis Preston:which is like the from and the two and the subject and all of those things.
W. Curtis Preston:. Um, and it may have the full text content of the actual, uh, thing, whatever
W. Curtis Preston:it is, the email or the document.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and why do you do that with an archive?
W. Curtis Preston:And you don't do it with the backup, and that's because of
W. Curtis Preston:the way retrieves work, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Um, we don't necessarily know what, when or how the thing.
W. Curtis Preston:We just know that, you know, there was an email.
W. Curtis Preston:I remember seeing an.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:You know, I, I, I, uh, I, I worked in Twitter back in that crazy year
W. Curtis Preston:of 2022, and I remember getting an email from the boss at that time.
W. Curtis Preston:That said that I had to work long hours and uh, stuff and you know, or click
W. Curtis Preston:here by five o'clock or I'm gonna get fired with three months severance.
W. Curtis Preston:I remember that email.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't remember, I don't remember when it was sent or I don't know
W. Curtis Preston:the name of the e It's now 2030.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:And I'm filing a lawsuit about what happened back in 2022.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, but I.
W. Curtis Preston:A couple of key phrases in that email, and so I'm gonna search on the full body
W. Curtis Preston:of that email, and I very much remember the name of the guy that sent that email.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know what I'm talking about.
W. Curtis Preston:I'm just making stuff up here.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so you store a lot of metadata with an archive that you wouldn't
W. Curtis Preston:typically store in a backup system.
W. Curtis Preston:You don't typically go to a backup person and say, I want you to
W. Curtis Preston:restore all the, all the documents that have the word, blah, blah in
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:You don't do, that's not how backups typically work, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, again, there are some backups that go both ways, but generally
W. Curtis Preston:speaking, backups, you need the name of the server, the name of the
W. Curtis Preston:directory, the name of the file.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And I think that's a key with archives just
Prasanna Malaiyandi:because of how long the data may be sitting in the system, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Or it may exist that you need to be able to retrieve from.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Those servers might have come and gone, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:That initially had that data.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You may not even know what the name of that server was,
W. Curtis Preston:Exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, yeah,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:to find that based on other metadata becomes
Prasanna Malaiyandi:critical because you don't care, oh, it was stored on Apollo versus
Prasanna Malaiyandi:whatever other server name, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You only care, Hey, this is a project I care about, or this
Prasanna Malaiyandi:is the information I care.
W. Curtis Preston:ask yourself if you know the name of the exchange
W. Curtis Preston:server from seven years ago.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:No
W. Curtis Preston:No.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah, so I, I have this from, you know, under what is a retrieve, right?
W. Curtis Preston:As mentioned previously, a restore needs the name of a server directory,
W. Curtis Preston:database, file system, file name, table name, and actual date that
W. Curtis Preston:you want to restore the system too.
W. Curtis Preston:When doing a retrieve, you typically have none of that information, right?
W. Curtis Preston:You, you, it's so much more vague.
W. Curtis Preston:The other thing is quite often a retrieve is for a period of time,
W. Curtis Preston:not a single point in time, right?
W. Curtis Preston:It is like, gimme all the emails from Elon dot musk
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:For 2022.
W. Curtis Preston:for 2022, uh, period, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Give all the emails from the tumultuous time period of October and November.
W. Curtis Preston:This has gotta be over.
W. Curtis Preston:Like, you can't keep, I don't think he could be this tumultuous for that long.
W. Curtis Preston:But anyway, whatever the phrase is, give me all the emails that, that, uh, elon
W. Curtis Preston:dot musk twitter.com sent, you know, from October, 2022 until November of
W. Curtis Preston:2023, when he sold it for $15 billion.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, because I'm an investor or something and I'm going to, you know, sue 'em.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:A retrieve looks like that.
W. Curtis Preston:Right?
W. Curtis Preston:That's a very specific, you know, gimme a single person to emails.
W. Curtis Preston:All the emails they ever sent for three years.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, I,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You have
W. Curtis Preston:it it is e.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:That is the number one reason that archives are used is e-discovery.
W. Curtis Preston:And I'll give you a a perfect example.
W. Curtis Preston:I worked as a consultant on a project where we had a bank.
W. Curtis Preston:It was a, it was a, not a bank, but a, like a financial institution,
W. Curtis Preston:like an invest investment type place.
W. Curtis Preston:And they got sued and they wanted the, the, um, the plaintiff was requesting an
W. Curtis Preston:e-discovery request of all the emails in the last three years, and they didn't have
W. Curtis Preston:an archive system, so what they had to do was they had to, they had a weekly full
W. Curtis Preston:backup of exchange, and so they had to do a restorative exchange to January 1st.
W. Curtis Preston:Right?
W. Curtis Preston:Alternate server.
W. Curtis Preston:Alternate server exchange, restore, which for the record
W. Curtis Preston:is not the easiest thing to do.
W. Curtis Preston:And you have to make sure that that exchange server doesn't come to life.
W. Curtis Preston:And start sending mail, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, and start deleting mail cuz you know Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Retention periods and all that.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, so you, you do an alternate server, alternate time, restore of exchange.
W. Curtis Preston:You do the search, you create a PST file, and then you do a restore for January 8th,
W. Curtis Preston:and then you do all that all over again.
W. Curtis Preston:Then you do a restore for January 15th, and you do that all over again cuz they
W. Curtis Preston:had every for 52 weeks, times three years.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:oh my gosh,
W. Curtis Preston:So a hundred and what is that?
W. Curtis Preston:It's 156 restores.
W. Curtis Preston:This was a huge project.
W. Curtis Preston:We had a team of like 15 expensive consultants doing restores around
W. Curtis Preston:the clock for like three months.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Because you also have limited resort.
W. Curtis Preston:This was, this is pre-cloud, so we couldn't do, we couldn't do this.
W. Curtis Preston:Well, it was also limited tape, right?
W. Curtis Preston:It was tape.
W. Curtis Preston:So you, you there was only so many tape drives.
W. Curtis Preston:So we could only do as many restores as we had tape drives and um, you
W. Curtis Preston:know, and we're all goo gooing it.
W. Curtis Preston:There you go.
W. Curtis Preston:There's another verb.
W. Curtis Preston:Me, verbing.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Eh, using the
W. Curtis Preston:this in a, in a, in using a gooey, by the way that that phrase
W. Curtis Preston:dates me, no one calls it a gooey anymore.
W. Curtis Preston:And long story short, I remember that that thing cost a client
W. Curtis Preston:a couple of million bucks.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh, I could imagine with that many people, yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Where they could have probably bought an email archive solution
W. Curtis Preston:If they had had
Prasanna Malaiyandi:less.
W. Curtis Preston:they could have done a single retrieve.
W. Curtis Preston:Give me all emails with these phrases in it.
W. Curtis Preston:For the last three years.
W. Curtis Preston:Go.
W. Curtis Preston:There's your
Prasanna Malaiyandi:they purchase an email archive solution after that?
W. Curtis Preston:Yes, they did.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Okay,
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:so people learn, which is good.
W. Curtis Preston:yeah, exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, so, um, there, there's a, see if I was looking forward in the chapter
W. Curtis Preston:here, but here, here's another way I like, this is a phrase that I coin.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, no one uses it, but , this is a phrase that I coined.
W. Curtis Preston:A backup is the secondary copy of primary data, and an archive is
W. Curtis Preston:the primary copy of secondary data.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It's typically the only copy,
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:right?
W. Curtis Preston:Don't mess with my sentence, man.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, . But so backup is the secondary copy of primary data, meaning
W. Curtis Preston:it's the other copy of the really important actively used data.
W. Curtis Preston:And then archive is the primary copy.
W. Curtis Preston:Often the only.
W. Curtis Preston:Of sec of data that has secondary value.
W. Curtis Preston:Right?
W. Curtis Preston:So another copy of the email.
W. Curtis Preston:But in most ca so email archive is probably the most used type of archive.
W. Curtis Preston:The other type, the active archive and the sort of old school archive.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, in fact, I remember with, with with Networker that if you selected
W. Curtis Preston:a bunch of files and then you said archive them, once the archive was
W. Curtis Preston:successful and it made two copies, it would actually delete the primary.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yep.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Because at that point, that's the purpose, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Because you're archiving for some reason,
W. Curtis Preston:right.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:it's no longer needed on the primary.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, we, um, we actually had, you know, there's actually chapter 10 in the book
W. Curtis Preston:where we actually go into more detail into different types of archives.
W. Curtis Preston:That was the chapter that, uh, Mr.
W. Curtis Preston:Fri wrote who, um, is a fan of the pod and, and a guest of
W. Curtis Preston:the pod we might have him on.
W. Curtis Preston:When we get,
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Would we talk about that chapter?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, but I, so I, I just, again, going back to the backup and the archive, um,
W. Curtis Preston:can I use a backup to do eDiscovery?
W. Curtis Preston:I, I, I just gave you a story of, the answer is yes, but it will
W. Curtis Preston:be one of the most painful and expensive processes you've ever done.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It wasn't built for that purpose.
W. Curtis Preston:It wasn't built for that purpose, you know, a.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:like apo.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It's like
W. Curtis Preston:It's like . It's like a.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Aor, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:A fork is good for one thing.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:A spoon is good for different purposes.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Apo not really great for either purpose.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:It gets by, but
W. Curtis Preston:it's like the, one of the most worthless things on the
W. Curtis Preston:planet, I have to say, is the sports.
W. Curtis Preston:Whoever invented, I hope you got millions of dollars, but I hate sports.
W. Curtis Preston:You know, the only time I see sports, you know, who does sports?
W. Curtis Preston:Sports?
W. Curtis Preston:Kfc.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Hmm,
W. Curtis Preston:puts sports in their, um, in their food.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know why I would know that.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:for like mac and cheese and mashed potatoes and stuff.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, anyway, the, the, yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:Ex exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:It's, it's, it's just, um, like if you've never tried to do any,
W. Curtis Preston:because the thing is with an e-discovery request, I don't know the
W. Curtis Preston:server, I don't know the directory.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know the name of the file.
W. Curtis Preston:I know that it's files owned.
W. Curtis Preston:This person files or emails with this content in them, right?
W. Curtis Preston:The company's been accused of, uh, an un what's it called?
W. Curtis Preston:The, a hostile work environment.
W. Curtis Preston:There, there was a, there was a person in, in Department X
W. Curtis Preston:that, um, used a particular word.
W. Curtis Preston:He used it every other.
W. Curtis Preston:Every other word.
W. Curtis Preston:And even though he was asked to not use that word, he used that
W. Curtis Preston:word all the time, and he used it in emails and, and his bosses knew
W. Curtis Preston:it, and they, they wouldn't stop.
W. Curtis Preston:And so you prove that with an email archive, with a e-discovery request.
W. Curtis Preston:You ask for all the emails from that person containing that word, right?
W. Curtis Preston:And then you look and, and then you look at that and you're like, look,
W. Curtis Preston:look at all these emails where, hi, hi.
W. Curtis Preston:His boss was, His boss never once let's also search the boss's email to, you know?
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:You could basically, that's the purpose of what a discovery request
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And you can't say I,
W. Curtis Preston:world you would do that with a backup system.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And you can't say, I'm not gonna do this because
Prasanna Malaiyandi:we don't have the technical ability.
W. Curtis Preston:You can't do that.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:That, that is, that is a surefire way to have What, so we talked about this
W. Curtis Preston:with the interview of the, um, um, with Joseph Dehner, the, the lawyer.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, we talked about this concept of adverse inference.
W. Curtis Preston:So it, it, it means that the judge in charge of a case will infer from your
W. Curtis Preston:behavior, something adverse to your case.
W. Curtis Preston:The judge will say, they say they don't have it or that they can't get it.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, nobody could be that incompetent, et cetera.
W. Curtis Preston:They're trying to hide something.
W. Curtis Preston:So whatever the plaintiff says they were doing, just assumed that they were doing
W. Curtis Preston:it and, and, and move forward accordingly.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, the, the, the famous case and I talked about it on that podcast.
W. Curtis Preston:There was a famous case, a well known.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, financial trading firm, and they were sued and they had
W. Curtis Preston:used their backups as archives.
W. Curtis Preston:Let this be a lesson to you kids.
W. Curtis Preston:They had used their backups as their archives, and they had changed
W. Curtis Preston:email systems multiple times.
W. Curtis Preston:They had changed backup systems multiple times.
W. Curtis Preston:They had changed tape system multiple times, and so the restore was like a much
W. Curtis Preston:more complicated version of the one that I, that I talked about a few minutes.
W. Curtis Preston:And they also, you know, their, their tape storage system wasn't the best either.
W. Curtis Preston:And so they had taken an inordinately amount of, an inordinate amount of time
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Mm-hmm.
W. Curtis Preston:do the retrieve, and then they eventually, there's
W. Curtis Preston:a process that you certify that the retrieve is finished.
W. Curtis Preston:They did that process and then they came back and they said,
W. Curtis Preston:crap, we found another box of tape.
W. Curtis Preston:, right?
W. Curtis Preston:The judge was like, you know what, you know I'm done with you people.
W. Curtis Preston:Nobody can be this bad at it, and backups and archives and stuff.
W. Curtis Preston:And so he's like, I'm issuing an adverse inference instruction to the
W. Curtis Preston:jury, which basically said, you know, you whatever, whatever the plaintiff
W. Curtis Preston:said is on the tapes it's on the tapes because I, we got, we gotta move on.
W. Curtis Preston:And so they lost.
W. Curtis Preston:It was like a 2 billion lawsuit.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh my gosh.
W. Curtis Preston:um, because they, because they
W. Curtis Preston:use their backups as archives.
W. Curtis Preston:This is why I make such a big deal over the difference
W. Curtis Preston:between backups and archives.
W. Curtis Preston:It's not just cause I am, you know, a pedantic individual, which I am.
W. Curtis Preston:Right.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, you know, we've, I've given you some other examples like golf
W. Curtis Preston:and, and nauseous and nauseated.
W. Curtis Preston:Uh, what was it?
W. Curtis Preston:Deceased and
W. Curtis Preston:decedent.
W. Curtis Preston:These are all really important words.
W. Curtis Preston:Words mean things.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, and, um, but it, it, you know, it's sort of like the
W. Curtis Preston:joke of like, let's eat grandma.
W. Curtis Preston:Let's eat grandma, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Commas, you know, comma saves commas, save lives, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Um, words matter, and it's important to understand the difference
W. Curtis Preston:between backup and archive.
W. Curtis Preston:And I'm fine if you produce a product that does both things.
W. Curtis Preston:Just make sure you do both things.
W. Curtis Preston:Just don't use that phrase.
W. Curtis Preston:We're gonna archive a backup.
W. Curtis Preston:It hurts my ears.
W. Curtis Preston:Right?
W. Curtis Preston:Just like it hurts my ears when you say you're going golfing.
W. Curtis Preston:But that one I, I
Prasanna Malaiyandi:You can't do anything
W. Curtis Preston:gave that argument of Yeah, I can't do anything about it.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't have a golfing podcast.
W. Curtis Preston:Oh, I'm sorry.
W. Curtis Preston:A golf podcast.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Oh, Curtis
W. Curtis Preston:podcast.
W. Curtis Preston:You got any final thoughts, Mr.
W. Curtis Preston:P?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:duh.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:No, just.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Like you said, just be aware that they are different.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Archive and backup.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Know the right context.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:And I think the other question is also, I know we talked about this
Prasanna Malaiyandi:in organizations chapter, right?
Prasanna Malaiyandi:But understand what the requirements are to help you decide.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:Do you need an archive system or a backup system, or both?
W. Curtis Preston:Well, if you live in America, I would
W. Curtis Preston:argue strongly that you need.
W. Curtis Preston:, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Because we live in the most litigious society in the history.
W. Curtis Preston:I don't know what it's like over there, you know, in other countries.
W. Curtis Preston:I know Joe talked a little bit about the differences in eDiscovery that we have
W. Curtis Preston:sort of the strongest e-discovery laws.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, you know, you're gonna get sued for something.
W. Curtis Preston:And the cost of a, the cost of doing a retrieve from a backup, uh, is, is.
W. Curtis Preston:Ridiculous.
W. Curtis Preston:So, um, don't use your backup system as an archive and honestly, don't use
W. Curtis Preston:your archive system as a backup, right?
W. Curtis Preston:Like Google Vault is an archive, not a backup.
W. Curtis Preston:You're gonna be very unhappy if you lose your whole inbox because of a
W. Curtis Preston:ransomware attack, and then you go to Google Vault and they can give you all the
W. Curtis Preston:emails you had for the last five years.
W. Curtis Preston:That is not what you're looking for.
Prasanna Malaiyandi:exactly.
W. Curtis Preston:Yeah.
W. Curtis Preston:All right.
W. Curtis Preston:Hopefully you learned a thing or two.
W. Curtis Preston:And again, you know what?
W. Curtis Preston:If you wanna argue with me, reach out to me w Curtis Preston gmail,
W. Curtis Preston:or at WC preston on Twitter.
W. Curtis Preston:I'll tell you why you're wrong.
W. Curtis Preston:Um, , remember to subscribe so that you can restore it all.