5 Aug 2014

Storage Closets in the Cloud

There's nothing new about the concept of backup. For centuries, or possibly even millennia, before the advent of computers people have been concerned with keeping important documents safe from theft, fire and other disasters.
Computer files can be just as important as those on physical media. In many cases, they may be the only record of important transactions. Keeping them safe is simultaneously easier and more difficult than strictly physical documents, simply because until and unless these files are written onto a physical medium, they are ephemeral -- only a set of bits located on some device.
Until recently, backing up computer files was a matter of putting those files and data onto some type of physical media that could, in turn, be placed in an assumed safe location. To a large extent, that approach still holds true. Many of us transfer mission-critical (and less important) files to DVDs, and hopefully safeguard them in a location separated from where this data normally resides.
PARTNER INSIGHTS

WHAT'S THIS?

Special Report: Multistate Tax Reports® 2014 Survey of State Tax Departments
Nexus-Creating Activities from Bloomberg BNA’s Annual Survey
State Taxation in the Digital Age

The natural disasters and weather of the past few years have shown that, as well-intentioned as this approach may be, a wide swath of destruction, such as happened with Superstorm Sandy, can destroy the backup along with the original.


HERE, THERE, AND WAY OVER THERE
Given the increasing realization that storing backups of your and your clients' mission-critical data anywhere in the geographic vicinity of the original data simply isn't good practice, there are several ways you can go.
One way is to store your entire backup offsite. There are storage companies such as Iron Mountain that will archive a hard drive and return it for re-use or in the event of a data disaster. With portable USB drives the size of a deck of cards and with capacities up to 4 terabytes, doing a complete backup once every few days, with incremental backups onto DVD every evening, then express-shipping these to a storage facility, is another approach. With this approach, getting the media back to do a restore is going to take a certain amount of time.
You could also use a hybrid plan, backing up locally onto portable hard drives and DVDs, keeping these in a location that you feel is safe, and also backing up mission-critical data to the cloud, where it will be secure in case of a local disaster or fire.
Your decision should be based largely on what you feel you're going to need in the event of recovery from data loss. With the bad weather, earthquakes and other natural disasters that have occurred over the past several years, even companies and firms with good backup protocols were unable to recover quickly, if at all, simply because off-site backup was destroyed along with the onsite files.
Backing up into the cloud and retrieving the backup when needed can be a slow process, depending on the amount of data and the speed of the Internet connection you are able to maintain. But with this approach, for the most part, you and your clients can be back up and running fairly quickly once you have a secure location and Internet access. This makes backing up into the cloud, at least in part, almost a no-brainer.


GETTING IT DONE
You may (and should) already have a backup and disaster recovery plan in place. That's good, but technology changes quickly, and what made sense two years ago may not be the best course to take today. Too many backup plans are made without enough thought about the recovery process. And recovery, should you ever need to perform it, is the reason for backing up in the first place.
So re-examining your firm's (and clients') plan every year or two is a good idea, and isn't really very time-consuming. There are numerous approaches to backup planning, including simply running mission-critical applications hosted in the cloud, rather than in-house. By taking that path, if feasible, you offload the responsibility of backup to the application provider, though it's still always good practice to have your own copy of data, just in case.
Assuming that you decide to incorporate cloud-based backup into your operational planning, the rest is just getting it done. There are numerous vendors of cloud-based backup and recovery services, several of which are detailed in the accompanying sidebar.
When investigating vendors, keep in mind that some offer backup plans for both individual and home users, and for business use. At first glance, you may be tempted to go the consumer version route -- it's often less expensive. But in many cases, there's a difference in business class offerings, especially when it comes to recovery-phase customer service. And, if you have a large volume of data that needs to be backed up, business-class backup may be able to offer faster upload options than those available to consumers. But if cost is a major factor in your decision, a consumer-grade backup offering, or even one of the free/low-cost cloud storage spaces such as Dropbox, GoogleDrive, OneDrive, and iCloud, is better than having no geographically disconnected data storage.


APPROACHING THE FINISH LINE
It's tempting to make a decision, choose a vendor, then sit back and let things take their own course. Backing up partially, or completely, into the cloud requires its own protocol. Make sure that you follow through.
How are you going to handle network backup -- by backing up individual workstations to the network, then backing up the network to the cloud? In some cases, it makes more sense to back up individual workstations to the cloud at different times. In many cases, how you use the available Internet bandwidth is going to have some effect on your decision. Spreading the backup down to a more granular workstation level also offers some protection if the network crashes in the middle of a backup. If you're backing up the network, rather than individual workstations, a network crash during a backup puts the entire backup in jeopardy. If you are backing up individual workstations, you may lose less overall data if the network goes down during a backup.
And regardless of how you plan to back up, make sure that you give equal thought to how you will recover. Having a formal recovery plan, detailing the protocols and procedures given different scenarios, takes a bit of effort to prepare. But having it can be a business lifesaver if recovery ever becomes necessary. And as you examine cloud backup vendors' offerings, be sure to pay equal attention to how their recovery options work.
Finally, if you do decide to backup partially or wholly in the cloud, make certain that you obtain the highest-speed Internet service possible. And in selecting your Internet provider and plan, pay particular attention to upload speeds. Internet service providers all tend to emphasize download speeds, but with backup and recovery to the cloud, the upload side of the equation is of much greater importance, since the majority of your backup interaction is going to be into the cloud, rather than in the other direction. Keep in mind that for the most part, getting data into the cloud is going to be the slowest spot in cloud-based backup.




CLOSET PROVIDERS
Selected cloud backup vendors
Acronis Backup to Cloud
www.acronis.com
(781) 782-9000e Acronis is probably one of the best-known vendors in the backup software market. Backup to Cloud melds Acronis Backup with cloud storage, though you can easily set it to provide hybrid backup, putting some files in the cloud and some locally. One really nice feature of Acronis backup software is that the restore can be made to a completely different hardware setup. Backup to Cloud pricing starts at $99 per PC per year, or $799 for 500GB for an unlimited number of machines. For a fee, you can send Acronis a hard disk and they will back it up to the cloud for you.


Carbonite
www.carbonite.com
Another fairly well-known vendor, Carbonite offers varying levels of personal and business backup in the cloud. Business plans start at around $269, with server backup starting at around $799. They claim 50,000 small-business users, including many in specific industries - among them, accounting.


MozyPro
www.mozy.com
(877) 669-9776
MozyPro is Mozy's business-oriented service, and supplies cloud backup, hybrid local and cloud backup, as well as a Mozy Data Shuttle seeding service, which allows you to send an initial large complete backup to the vendor on hard disk, backing up from that point on over the Internet. Pricing is more expensive for servers rather than individual workstations. For example, 500GB of backup from individual workstations costs $2,090 a year, which includes backing up an unlimited number of PCs. For one or more servers, the same 500GB will cost you $2,310.

Case Studies: Business Intelligence

Faced with the harsh reality that tax work is increasingly falling victim to commoditization, many accounting professionals are shifting more of their focus to value-added advisory services.
By bolstering its advisory services, a firm can help differentiate itself from the competition, enhance revenue, and create a stickier, stronger relationship with their client. Enter business intelligence tools.
As described by the American Institute of CPAs, "Business intelligence refers to the coordinated deployment of technologies, applications and business processes to support the collection, integration, analysis and presentation of business information." Its purpose is to help managers and others responsible for business strategy better understand their organization's operations, make wiser, more informed business decisions, and manage operational performance.
PARTNER INSIGHTS
WHAT'S THIS?

Nexus-Creating Activities from Bloomberg BNA’s Annual Survey
Special Report: Multistate Tax Reports® 2014 Survey of State Tax Departments
State Taxation in the Digital Age

Many accounting firms have yet to jump into the waters of business intelligence tools -- but that appears to be changing.


Speed matters
Firm: Armanino / San Ramon, Calif.
Size: 450 staff members
Product: QlikView
Commencement date: 2011
On record: Chief operating officer and consulting partner Matt Armanino
Challenge/objective: One of the factors that sparked interest in a business intelligence solution was the fact that, in preparing reports for monthly executive committee meetings and partner meetings, the finance team was spending days pulling data from various sources.
Amount spent: The cost is driven by the number of users. Armanino estimated that if a firm were to start with an executive dashboard and have between five and 10 licensed users, it would cost about $25,000 to $50,000, and that their return on investment was less than a year.
Process: The firm spoke with its team of IT consultants who have significant experience deploying business intelligence tools such as QlikView, Adaptive Insights and Microsoft BI, and determined that QlikView was a perfect fit for the firm's needs.
After implementing the solution, the first big project was to create an executive dashboard with key firm metrics such as revenue, realization, staff utilization, effective rate per hour, and accounts receivable aging. "So, we defined the things that we wanted to track and came up with the first dashboard," said Armanino.
With QlikView, users can have different permission rights. "You can slice and dice the information in a self-service fashion," said Armanino. "Because you can do so much with it, we said our managers should have it, too. So, we gave them access rights to the information they could use."
Results: Armanino said that the solution enables users to better understand their business on a more real-time basis. The impact on the firm is the uptick on key metrics that impact profitability.
Next steps: Armanino said that it is easy to deploy additional dashboards, so it is likely that the firm will develop more of them in the future.


Benchmarking and beyond
Firm: Keiter / Glen Allen, Va.
Size: 140 employees, including 70 CPAs
Product/service(s): ProfitCents from Sageworks
Commencement date: 2010
On record: Partner Robert Gary
Challenge/objective: Those who implement ProfitCents from Sageworks can benchmark their business clients, use financial analysis reports to bolster consulting opportunities, and keep up with audit and review standards, according to the vendor.
The firm wanted to help its clients to benchmark their businesses to industry metrics so they could improve financial operations and adopt best practices within their industries, said Gary.
Process: "We first became aware of ProfitCents and other business intelligence offerings through our association with industry alliances [Boomer Circles and the Leading Edge Alliance]," said Gary. "We investigated various alternatives and chose ProfitCents."
ProfitCents provided training and support, and Keiter kicked off the process by identifying partner and manager "champions" within the various practices of the firm. It developed "power users" through training and field experience, and tracked the usage by monitoring engagements and case studies.
Results: "We believe that the product has benefitted the firm by providing value to our clients. This has allowed us to differentiate our firm from our competition, and answered our clients' desire to improve their performance by benchmarking their performance within their industries," said Gary.
Next steps: Going forward, the firm plans to utilize the information in those situations where it has substantial industry experience to enhance industry best practices and further develop its industry specializations.


Adding value
Firm: HLB Gross Collins / Atlanta
Size: Approximately 60 staff members
Product/service(s): iLumen
Commencement date: Fall 2009
On record: Director of consulting services Jeff Plank
Challenge/objective: With iLumen, users can turn data analysis from a disconnected, labor-intensive process into an automated resource that helps the user increase revenue and grow the business.
Amount spent: $10,000 implementation, including staff time.
Process: Steve Gross, a founding partner of the firm, knows one of the founders of iLumen and that's how the firm became familiar with the business intelligence tool. All of the firm's clients are managed through ProSystem fx Engagement, which works closely with iLumen. After ensuring that all of the decision-makers were on board and working closely with the iLumen implementation team, the firm started using iLumen with about 60 to 70 clients -- mainly the larger, forward-thinking clients who understand and appreciate the value of the service.
Results: The solution "has worked out well," according to Plank. "It's a point of differentiation as we are meeting with new clients. We have created some custom reports that utilize the latest Construction Financial Management Association benchmarks and we use this product for all our construction clients. We like the integration with Pro System fx Engagement, our audit software," said Plank, who also noted that about 20 percent of the firm's clients are in the construction industry.
Next steps: The firm may create some additional custom reports for additional industry segments that it has expertise in, such as manufacturing/distribution and financial services.

Latest Technology in Accounting

  1. Business Intelligence 

    Having Business Intelligence solution helps in preparing reports for monthly executive committee meetings and partner meetings, otherwise the finance team was spending days pulling data from various sources. Executive dashboard such as revenue, realization, staff utilization, effective rate per hour, and accounts receivable aging. 
    Also Business Intelligence helps benchmark business clients, use financial analysis reports to bolster consulting opportunities, and keep up with audit and review standards. 



    Storage Closets in the Cloud 

    The latest trend with accounting applications is Web hosting off-site. Instead of installing a program onto your computer and saving data there, the program resides on a server in a different location; the saved information is accessed via the Internet. That's also called "working in the cloud." Businesses can save money in software and hardware purchases by signing up with a cloud provider and using its programs and space for saving data, meaning there is no need to get a bigger hard-drive or worry about program versions. The other advantage of the cloud is that you have access to your information anywhere you may be.


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15 Jan 2012

هش








| بذور ذلك الصّمت الهش باتت تتسع وتجبره على الخلود للحلم ؛ حدّق بها كثيراً وفجأة اكتشف أنها عيناه . تنتابه نكسة الحزن بتدنيس أشياء كثيرة يتقصد في كثير من الأحيان عدم فهمها فـ كرات الشك تتقاذف لتحل مشكلة الإعتقاد .


| حُلم !! وأين هي أدوات الحلم حتى يكتمل ربيعاً . غارق بها ولا أحد سوى الهواء يفهمه .. يتعلق به يتنهد !! تطول فيعود رأسه إلى الوراء ويسقط على كتفه - علّها تفهمه - يلملم أهدابه مطوقاً إياها بجسده الذي مالبث أن مكث على الأرض ليزفر نفس الوداع .

لعنةٌ الصّمتْ






قبل الكلام 
الكتابةُ عملية استبطانٍ كُبرى، إنها سَفَرٌ في أكثرِ تعرّجات اللاوعي غُموضاً، إنّها تأمّلٌ بطيء
إيزابيل الليندي | باولا


يستفزّنُي الحرف جداً ، يتسلّقُ على مشاعري بوقاحةٍ متعمّدة ليكشفَ ضعفي .. هو الرفيقُ الأقرب -  يوماً ما - يترُكني بلا مأوى ..  بلا غطاءْ .. يُعيدني إلى ماقبل البدايات حيثُ الإنتماءُ للعزلةِ ..  لا أعلمُ ماهي حدودي ولا كيفَ أرسُمها من جديد ..!!
تجرُّني البداياتُ القديمة إلى حيثُ لا أعلم .. إلى قتلِ الأشياءِ الجميلة التي بداخلي .. إلى الفقد الذي يَجتاحُ مُدن َجَسدي  .. إلى ذاكرةٍ مُلئت بكلِّ الأشياء ِالتّالفة ..!!


سوادٌ يبشرّنا أن ثِمة ضوء سُيربك حياتنا .. سـَ يستنزفُ تفاصيلها .. و يُربك نبضها .. السّواد أكثر أمناً نختبيء خلفه دون حاجزٍ يهتكُ صدقنا .. فالناسُ يعيشون في نفوسِ بعضهم أكثرَ ممّايعيشون َفي نفوسهم .. ومعَ كلِّ نفْسٍ تسكننا نحتاجُ قسطاً من العزلةِ ربّما يطولْ..  والأهم أن لا يتوقّف !!  نُمارسُ مراقبة َتفاصيلِهم الصَّغيرة فـَيحدثُ أن نُصابَ بالصّمتْ..  وسطَ كمٍّ هائلٍ من الضجيجِ الكلامي يدور حولكَ و معك .. وَ وحدها القلوبُ المُنكسرة تُدركُ تفاصيلَ الدّمع الذي يختبيءُ خلفَ الحزن العظيم .. ربّما لأنَّ رابطَ العزلةِ الذي يجمعنا يضيق كلَّما ذرفنا أكثر ..!

الأماني الثّقال هي تلكَ الحكايا المدفونه في راحةِ القلب .. تتركُ بصماتها على أجفانِنا حين تتعبُ العينْ في اخفاء ِما تملكْ ،، الأماني الثقال انصافاً لها لاتُنسى وَ لا تبارح الذاكرة ... تبقى في ذلكَ المكانِ القصيّ بينَ القلب والعقل .. ذلك المكان الذي يُعانقكَ كلَّما نويتَ العُزلة .. ويُعانقكَ وكأنّهُ أنجبك .. يفهم تفاصيلَ حياتك تلك اللّتي تَخفى على
كلِّ أحد ولا تترجم بشكل جيد

وحْدهم العاشقون يرتَكبونَ الأماني في المسالكِ الضيّقة مع اتساعِ الظّلام .. َو وحدهم تُسرقُ منهم .. !!


وداعيه
الكتابةُ هي فرّصةُ الكاتبِ في العودةِ الى الطفولة المنسيّة أو المختبئةْ، وهذا يعني في العُمق أنّهُ توّاقٌ إلى العودة إلى انسانيّته الأصليّة ، كان ريلكه يقول : " للكتابة عند الرجل والمرأة هدفٌ واحد هو أن يصيرا كائنين بشريين " 
ممدوح عدوان | جنونٌ آخر

8 Dec 2011

فِلَسطين ليست عاطفةٌ تَرتَفعُ حرارتها وتَنخَفيضْ .. فِلَسطين قضيّة روحُ الأُمّة و شريانَها الثائِر على الدوامِ ..! ٨ / ١٢ أشعلناها بإيدنا .. والعَالم كُلّه عَم يتفرّج عَلينا ..  غردوا اليوم من أجل فلسطين بمناسبة الذكرى ال٢٤ للانتفاضة  #Intifada1

25 Jul 2011

إن ــهُ عامٌ بأكمله




مُنذ أن ازداد بي العام .. كبرت كثيراً يا أمّي .. كثيراً جداً أكبر من أن أزدحم في 28 حرفاً و في عِدّة أسطر .. حِين كبرتُ يا أمّي .. كبُرت مَعي أمّتي .. نمى لها أجنحةٌ فأشرقت الأرض بنور الحريّة .. و زلزل الحق أرجاء المكان 
لا شيء يدفعُني للكتابةِ سوى أنّ على القلبِ أن يتمنّى بقايا أمنياتٍ .. لا يهُمني التفكيرُ المُرهق ، هل سنكبرُ معاً أو سنبقى معاً أم سيتخلّى أحدُنا عن الأخر .. فقد نَمضي العُمر كلّه نقرأ ورقةَ حياتنا ، نتفقد لحظات الذكريات .. نبكي .. نضحك .. ولكنَّ عجلةَ الحياة تستمر .. فعجلةُ الحياةِ لا تعرقلها بقايا الحكاياتِ أو دوامات الحزن ولا حتى نزعات الفرح .

دائماً هُناك في الحكاية سطر لم يُقرأ كما كُتب .. دائماً نكبرُ دونَ أنْ نشعر .. يتسربُ العمرُ مِنّا دونَ أن ننتبهَ أنّ الحياة كُلّها تسير دون انتظار .. الأن فقط أُدرك أنه قد مرّ عامٌ بأكملهِ من عُمري .. كيفَ لم أشعرُ بكلّ تلك الساعاتِ التي مضت !! هل لأني مارستُ ما أحب .. والتقيتُ بمن أحب .. وقرأتُ عيونَ من أحب .. واستمعتُ لهمساتهم !!

تقلقني فكرة أن أقسِمَ حياتي إلى سنواتٍ وأشهرٍ وأيام .. لأقفَ عندَ كلّ بداية عام أراجعُ فيها ما تبقى مني .. أنظرُ بتعب مغلف بالأمل للجبل القادم ومن أين أبدءُ تسلّقه ؟ وهل سأسقط !؟ و كيف هي سُبل النجاح ؟ مالذي لا يجعلني أختصرُ كلّ تلك المُعاناةِ و أمشي بمحاذاة القاع إلى الضفةُ الأخرى !! مالذي يجعلني أتسائلُ دوماً ماذا أحتاج ؟! وكم أحتاج ؟! ومن أحتاج ليرافقني في تلك الرحلة ؟!

سأبحثُ عمَّا يجب أن يكون وما يستحق لأتسلّقه لتكون بداية هذا العام من صناعتي أنا .. أعاودُ فيها الحياة إلى أن أصلَ إلى مبتغاي الأخير .. جنّةٌ عرضها السمواتُ والأرض .. يــا ألله
6-6-2011