Amid the unprecedented Louisiana flooding, at least 34,000 homes and businesses still don't have electricity as of Aug. 16. Two MSPs are now reporting that some on-premises customer networks have been completely destroyed, but in two specific cases the business data has been completely recovered and restored on cloud systems.The key takeaway: After several years of false starts, virtualized networks and data restores in the cloud are now proving their value during natural disasters."We've got one situation where a retail store is under water but we've been able to bring the customer up in the cloud," says one MSP that supports customers in the the Baton Rouge, Louisiana region. "So far, so good. I'm thinking that network will remain in the cloud for two weeks or more."The lengthy shift from on-premises networks to virtualize networks in the cloud is easily explained: Even when power is restored in the Baton Rouge area, the customer will need time to evaluate the viability of his physical offices, the MSP said. A second MSP reports a similar situation involving an entertainment business that lost a 25-node network in the flood -- though the company's mission critical data has been fully restored in the cloud.City-Parish offices will return to their normal operating hours on Wednesday, August 17, 2016. Baton Rouge City Court will be closed on Monday, August 15 2016 thru Friday, August 19 2016 . Court resumes Monday, August 22. ChannelE2E will continue to update this coverage as more information becomes available.
Both MSPs are using the same cloud backup and disaster recovery service. The MSPs requested anonymity because maintaining the recoveries has been especially difficult amid communication and connectivity challenges across the Louisiana.You can skip this ad in 5 seconds