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2 posts tagged with "infrastructure monitoring"

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Website Hosting Disaster Recovery That Works

· 6 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on June 14, 2026

Website Hosting Disaster Recovery That Works

If your site is down, hacked, corrupted after an update, or missing data after a storage issue, website hosting disaster recovery is the part that decides whether this is a short incident or a very expensive week. The first checks are always the same - what failed, what data is intact, what backup is clean, and how fast the service can return in a stable state. Panic is not infrastructure strategy.

Most businesses think they have disaster recovery because backups exist somewhere. That is only one piece. A backup that was never tested, sits on the same server, or takes twelve hours to restore is not much comfort when your checkout is offline and support tickets start multiplying.

Disaster recovery for hosting means having a practical path from failure to service restoration. It covers the systems around your website, not just the files. That includes the virtual server, database, DNS behavior, SSL certificates, application stack, storage volumes, access controls, and the people responsible for making decisions during an incident.

Server Monitoring for Small Business

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on April 23, 2026

Server Monitoring for Small Business

A small business server rarely fails at a convenient time. It starts with a slow checkout page, a database that hangs during business hours, or a site that goes offline while nobody is watching. That is why server monitoring for small business is not just an IT extra. It is basic operational protection.

For smaller teams, the real problem is not only outages. It is the amount of uncertainty around them. If you do not know your CPU load is pinned, your disk is nearly full, or your backup jobs have been failing for three days, you are managing by surprise. Monitoring changes that. It gives you early signals, faster response, and a calmer way to run infrastructure without adding full-time operations staff.