FaxLogic: Technology Partner Spotlight

Welcome to the next installment in our blog series highlighting the companies in SoftLayer’s new Technology Partners Marketplace. These Partners have built their businesses on the SoftLayer Platform, and we’re excited for them to tell their stories. New Partners will be added to the Marketplace each month, so stay tuned for many more come.
- Paul Ford, SoftLayer VP of Community Development

 

Scroll down to read a guest blog from FaxLogic CEO Eric Lenington. The unique FaxLogic service combines the best of analog fax, Internet fax, and fax servers to create a highly reliable, secure and scalable collaborative environment. To learn more about FaxLogic, visit http://www.faxlogic.com/.

Why the (Right) Cloud is the Best Place for Your Documents

Every business produces and consumes documents — this includes both paper and digital, both those created internally and those received from customers and business partners — all needing to be sorted and organized and most needing to be safely stored and easily retrieved (and ultimately, securely disposed of when they are no longer needed). The vast majority of companies find themselves trying to do this today in highly fragmented ways and usually with radically different approaches for paper documents than with digital ones. Often different departments, or even different groups within a department, develop their own way to deal with “their” documents, a way that “works for them.”

Digital documents are usually stored on in-house servers, on “shares” with folder structures that may only make sense to the person that originally built it — not to the person trying to find something in it. And few companies can say that they don’t have reams of paper files stored in file rooms or in “personal” file cabinets. FaxLogic helps our customers solve this problem by seamlessly integrating their paper and digital worlds.

We do this by supporting their existing network of fax machines, scanners and multi-function printers (the “gateways” to the digital world for paper documents) and by incorporating key features of current technologies that we are all familiar with – like email and search engines – into the realm of organizing, archiving, retrieving and sharing documents. FaxLogic is a cloud-based service, running on a cloud-based infrastructure, and it uses “the cloud” to safely and securely store our customer’s documents (whether paper or digital). This was no accident, and that is what I will focus on in this article, trying to “demystify” the cloud a bit, and discuss why it’s the best place for your documents.

What is “the Cloud” and What Value does it Bring?
Wikipedia, one of my favorite sources for good information, defines “cloud computing” like this:

Cloud computing is the delivery of computing as a service rather than a product, whereby shared resources, software and information are provided to computers and other devices as a utility (like the electricity grid) over a network (typically the Internet).

As I said earlier, FaxLogic is a cloud-based service; we are the “application” (document management) that is delivered to the “client” (our customer’s web browser). And we run on a cloud-based infrastructure, using providers like SoftLayer to manage the hardware layer that our application runs on and the networking layer that we use to deliver our service to our customers. Leveraging that “best of breed” infrastructure is a huge win for us, letting us focus where we add value – our application – while leaving the “plumbing” to others. Of course, a choice like that isn’t made lightly.

From Wikipedia’s definition, the term “shared resources” is the key. By leveraging cloud-based infrastructure and platform resources, we are able to use a small portion of a much larger and more robust environment than we could economically build ourselves. But the big kicker is that even though we are using only a small portion of that environment, we get to take advantage of the whole architecture and all its capabilities, just as if we were the only application running on it.

The “80% Rule”
An anecdotal number that’s been thrown around a lot, the “80% rule” says that 80% of all businesses fail within some short time period after a major catastrophe, like a fire, flood or earthquake. But this isn’t just an anecdote, numbers in the 60-90% range are real and well-documented. A study conducted by the insurance giant Chubb in 2008 put the likelihood of business failure after a fire at 70%. According to FEMA, of businesses without a disaster recovery plan already in place, 80% of those affected by hurricane Andrew in 1992 were out of business within three years. I won’t bore you with a long list of depressing statistics, a quick Google search will turn up many more. The point is that data loss, whether caused by natural disaster, human error, or malicious activity, is, more often than not, very difficult to overcome.

Paper files stored in file cabinets, and even digital files stored on backed-up in-house servers, are vulnerable. Ask yourself what you would do tomorrow if even half of the documents critical to your business were destroyed tonight.

The FaxLogic Cloud Solution
Now, I don’t want to suggest for one second that FaxLogic is the single solution for surviving such an event or that our platform should be thought of as a comprehensive disaster recovery solution. It is neither. But it is a critical part of the solution. When it comes to disaster recovery, Ben Franklin’s “ounce of prevention” couldn’t be more relevant. And as it applies to your business documents, that ounce is to get those documents out of harms way in the first place. This is where the cloud comes in.

Companies like SoftLayer provide cloud storage as a service – a highly scalable, secure environment to safely store files of virtually any kind. The architecture that such services are built on and the layers of redundancy they incorporate are beyond the reach of most small and many medium sized companies, but through the magic of cloud computing, we only need a small portion of that shared resource, while still getting to take advantage of the whole thing. The bottom line is that a well-designed cloud storage service will be hundreds or even thousands of times more reliable and durable than anything most businesses could economically build themselves, not to mention more secure.

FaxLogic takes our small portion of that shared resource, and through our application, makes it even more reliable and durable, by doing things like ensuring broad geographic distribution of multiple copies of each file, so there is no single point of failure even in the face of a major regional disaster.

Beyond the Worst Case Scenario
Secure, reliable cloud-based storage is just the basic building block that our application makes useful. Just the fact that your business documents are safer in the cloud isn’t the whole story, nor is it the whole value proposition of the cloud. Beyond the worst case scenario, storing your documents in the cloud brings real and tangible benefits to your day-to-day activities. We make it easy to capture both paper and digital documents and store them in the cloud, organize and easily find your documents when you need them, collaborate and share documents while controlling who has access to confidential information, and manage everything from a simple browser-based interface.

Think about how much easier day-to-day activity would be with capabilities like being able to access a shared document library from any Internet-enabled device, instantly find a faxed copy of a purchase order from six months ago by knowing only the name of the sender, or easily pull up a client’s latest work order revision without having to figure out who’s desk the client’s folder is on. We use the cloud to make this possible. By getting your documents out of their hiding places (stacks of paper on people’s desks, file cabinets down the hall, or even “shares” on local servers) that information is more freely accessible to those who need it.

Take Action
Businesses of all sizes can and are benefiting today from a wide range of cloud-based services, most of which weren’t even available five years ago. The underlying value proposition they all have in common is that they give each customer access to a small piece of a large “shared resource,” one that generally wouldn’t be economically feasible to build and support in-house. And each customer can take advantage of the scale and capabilities of the whole resource. When it comes to capturing, storing, organizing, retrieving and sharing documents, the cloud’s value proposition offers a clear advantage over any on-site approach.

FaxLogic has built a best-in-class cloud-based application on top of best-in-class cloud-based infrastructure and platform services, giving our customers a multiple of that value proposition. By letting our customers leverage their existing equipment and without requiring radical changes to their existing business processes, we make it easy to start taking advantage of the benefits of cloud storage for all of their paper and digital documents.

-Eric Lenington, FaxLogic

PHIL’s DC: HostingCon

HostingCon 2011 in San Diego may have been a huge success for SoftLayer, but I walked away with a different experience following my intense pursuit of building the PHIL’s DC brand. Apparently, the hosting industry wants to see my data center succeed before they believe it, and I think it’s really just fear rearing its ugly head. People are afraid of what they don’t understand, so the uninitiated would probably be terrified as they try to learn what I’m doing.

In an effort to help some of the bigger names in the hosting industry get in on the ground floor of PHIL’s DC, I took a stroll down the HostingCon aisles. Vendors like Parallels and cPanel were obvious choices to discuss business partnerships, and I was sure TheWHIR wanted the scoop on the next big thing in hosting, so I made sure to give them all a chance to speak with me. The documentary film team I hired (the guy I met outside the San Diego Convention Center who said he’d follow me with a camera for $3.50/hour) recorded our interactions for posterity’s sake:

I’d like send shouts out to thank Candice Rodriguez from TheWHIR, Aaron Phillips from cPanel and John McCarrick from Parallels for agreeing to let us film our organic interactions. They’ve further inspired me to build a data center that will make these apparent “snubs” and “rejections” a thing of the past. To Summer and Natalie at the SoftLayer booth: Please stop making fun of my Server Challenge attempt every time you see me at the office … I think I had something in my eye when I was competing, so it wasn’t a fair measure of my skillz.

Oh, and if you didn’t get a chance to attend our “Geeks Gone Wild” party at HostingCon, you’d probably be interested in seeing video from The Dan Band’s performance of “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” cPanel posted it here: http://www.vimeo.com/28160105 (NSFW language, The Dan Band take artistic license with profanity)

-PHIL

Social Marketing v. Social Media – And Them Cowboys?

Once again the Dallas Cowboys let a game they weren’t supposed to win slip away from them in the 4th quarter. Again it was Tony “oops” Romo that had a hand (or “didn’t have hands”) in the loss. I can’t blame it all on him as I saw many problems that led up to the defeat. I, as a master football coach of 4-6 year-old flag football, could write multiple paragraphs on that subject, but because this is a social media blog, I will get back on topic.

After last night’s “4th quarter of doom” that probably led to crazy nightmares for my sleeping kids (I may have been yelling loudly and often), I decided to open Twitter to see what everyone in the world thought about the game. I have to admit I was a little shocked at how many Cowboy haters are out in the wild. Of course the game was trending, and the conversation was … diverse: You had your die-hard Cowboy fans that were saying, “Shake it off, you weren’t supposed to win anyway.” You had your fair weather fans that were saying, “Great, another season opener loss, I guess I’ll follow the Texans instead.” You had the fans of other teams that were saying, “Haha, the Cowboys lost again – Go (Insert your team here)!” And, of course you had the pure Cowboy haters who were saying, “#$%^#$%^#$ the Cowboys they #$%#$% and #$%# and then #$%#$%. Eat it!” I would say most were Cowboy haters, and most of the tweets were not even close to being rated PG-13.

Stay with me now … I’m finally onto the real topic.

Social Media
What I saw on Twitter last night was real Social Media to me. It was current, real time, opinionated, cool and sad all at the same time. It encapsulated the thoughts and reactions of the public to something that was happening or just happened. Why is social media cool? A couple of weeks ago when the earthquake struck the northeast, people were saying that they received tweet updates of the ground shaking and notifications that an earthquake hit seconds before they felt the tremors in their area. Think about that and how many possible uses that has in lots of different industries. X happens, Y needs to know about it right away, Z tweets it or posts it on Facebook (or any of the 2000 other social apps out there), and like magic you have the information almost before you are supposed to. That’s viral social media.

Social Marketing
Social Marketing isn’t nearly as sexy. It’s only and exactly what it sounds like. We do it at SoftLayer: You see tweets from us talking about press releases, new products, our new website, our new international locations and some of the other value we provide to customers because we know how easy it is to miss some of the best stuff in the noisy social sphere. It helps us build our brand and helps with awareness by getting our name in front of people who may not have seen it otherwise. It drives traffic to our website and straight to our order form. It is significant to our bottom line.

The challenge with this kind of engagement is that the volume of content can seem overwhelming to some. Some customers only want to hear the viral social media kind of stuff with up to the minute news (which is our vision for @SoftLayerNotify), but it’s tough to abandon the social marketing piece because it’s been so measurably successful for us.

With that being said, we want to hear from you about what you like and don’t like about our social engagement. What you would like to see more of? What would you like to see less of? Do you like it? Do you hate it? We’re definitely listening … Well as long as we’re not busy getting ready for the next flash mob.

-@skinman454

Why Are The Rainforests Disappearing?

rainforest
Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rainforest_(Dominica).jpg

The rainforests are one of our most precious natural habitats, providing homes for thousands of unique plant and animal species, as well as a fair proportion of the oxygen that we breathe. It is also a source of many life-saving medicines, including 70% of the plant-based ingredients in cancer drugs, and it helps to prevent climate change by converting carbon dioxide into oxygen and plant matter via the process of photosynthesis. Unfortunately, this priceless resource is disappearing at an alarming rate.

Between 2000 and 2005, more than 50,000 square miles of Brazilian rainforest were lost due to deforestation. The rainforest is a highly complex, self-sustaining natural habitat that has taken millions of years to develop. Much of the deforestation is caused by cattle farmers, who cut down large areas of rainforest to make way for cattle farms, providing cheap beef for the North American, Chinese, and Russian markets. It has been estimated that 200 square feet of rainforest is permanently destroyed for every pound of beef produced on rainforest land.

Rainforests are a self-supporting ecosystem, in which the evaporating moisture from the forest is the source of most of the clouds that form above the forest and provide it with life-giving water. When you clear a large section of rainforest, the ground dries up within just a few years, turning once-fertile land into a crusty desert. This means that the cattle farmers can only use this land for a short time before they have to cut down another section of rainforest to provide grazing land for their cattle. This style of farming is known as ‘slash and burn’, and is believed to be responsible for half of all rainforest destruction.

The second biggest cause of deforestation is logging. Rare woods such as teak and mahogany grow in the rainforest, and can command a high price on the international furniture market. Often loggers will cut down a large area of rainforest for just a few logs of these sought-after timbers, with the rest of the trees being used for wood-chipping and charcoal. The roads that are created in order to transport the timber cause further damage to this fragile ecosystem.

Other threats to the rainforest include mining, agriculture, dams, oil exploration and global warming. A recent report from the WWF predicts that deforestation could wipe out or cause severe damage to almost two thirds of the Amazon rainforest within twenty years, unless something drastic is done about it. If you would like to get involved with the fight to save our precious rainforests, you can find out more about rainforest protection at rainforestrescue.sky.com.

SOURCES:
Rainforest Concern
WWF

Surprise! Left-Libertarians have a little something in common with Leftist Rachel Maddow

Historic Republican Victories for Congress go completely Un-Reported

by Eric Dondero

On Tuesday, Bob Turner won a seat in Congress in a New York District with a Democrat to Republican registration of 5 to 1. The seat had not been held by a Republican since 1923. To add even greater irony, and juiciness to the story, this was the famous Anthony Weiner seat.

In Nevada, Mark Amodei beat an attractive, well-funded, and highly-touted female Democrat candidate to win a congressional seat in Harry Reid's backyard.

A deuce for the GOP!

Arguably, the two special election victories could be seen as the biggest political stories of the year. But both the left media and the left-libertarian media (Reason, Cato.org, LewRockwell.com, Radley Balko, Nolan Chart, Daily Paul, Humble Libertarian, LP.org, ect...) completely ignored the story.

As did MSNBC's "award-winning" Journalist Rachel Maddow.

From NewsBusters "Maddow Can't Bear the Horror, the Horror of GOP House Victories in NY, Nevada":

What did Maddow focus on last night instead of those bellwether special elections? She interviewed Harvard professor, author and professional scold Elizabeth Warren about her challenge to GOP Senator Scott Brown. Then she chatted with former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell about Republicans pushing a plan to apportion electoral votes in the state by congressional district. Following that Maddow spoke with JournoList refugee Spencer Ackerman on alleged anti-Muslim bias in FBI and police training.

Then came the week-old news of a neo-Nazi being sentenced in Washington state for an attempted bombing along the Martin Luther King parade route in Spokane last January, and the tale of two Kentucky brothers creating the website "Shermageddon" -- a play on the expected traffic nightmare of "Carmageddon" in California two months ago -- after the Sherman Minton Bridge linking Kentucky and Indiana was closed due to structural damage.

Left-libertarians, and Far leftists engaging in selective reporting of top political stories to fit their agenda.

Who would have ever thunk it?

Photo h/t AmericanPower.com

A GOP pick-up for Virginia Senate?

From Eric Dondero:

The Ben Nelson seat in Nebraska moving into the GOP column, a potential GOP pick-up in Wisconsin, and now this:

Via Race42012.com:

Quinnipiac Virginia 2012 Senatorial Survey

•George Allen 45% (42%)
•Tim Kaine 44% (43%)

Note - Allen still needs to win the GOP primary against two strong Republican contenders.

Editor's comment - Made all the more sweet given that Kaine is the immediate past chair of the DNC.

More Red-meat libertarianism from Rick Perry

It's "Socialism"; Americans "tired of Political Correctness"

From the New York Times Magazine interview, Sept. 15:

“Look, when all the answers emanate from Washington, D.C., one size fits all, whether it’s education policy or whether it’s health care policy, that is, on its face, socialism,” Mr. Perry told Time’s Richard Stengel and Mark Halperin.

In 2009, Mr. Perry told a Republican group in Texas that the Obama administration is “hell bent on taking America towards a socialist country.” This year, as he faces charges from his rivals for the Republican nomination that his positions are too extreme to win the general election, Mr. Perry said he will not change the way he speaks to appeal to the nation as a whole.

He also refused to back down from his characterization of Social Security as a “Ponzi scheme.”

“American citizens are just tired of this political correctness and politicians who are tiptoeing around important issues.

RickPerry.org