Zetta is an American company specializing in cloud-based backup and disaster recovery for small and mid-sized businesses,[1] enterprises, and MSPs.[2]
Founded | 2008 |
---|---|
Founders | Jeff Whitehead, Lou Montulli, Jason Harrison, Jeff Treuhaft |
Headquarters | Sunnyvale, California , United States |
Number of employees | 11-50 |
Website | https://zetta-net.com/ |
Products
editZetta provides cloud backup and disaster recovery[3] services, on-premises backup and archiving and is most notable for its network efficient data transfer.[4] It uses lightweight agent software to replicate customer data, creating a second copy in Zetta's bi-coastal enterprise-grade data centers that is available for recovery after a data loss event, such as a server crash or natural disaster.[5] Zetta's end-to-end disaster recovery service provides deployment-to-failback coverage and features upfront network, firewall, VPN connectivity configuration and automated disaster recovery testing.[6] The software supports Windows, Linux, and Mac and has plug-ins for SQL, MS Exchange, Hyper-V, VMware, and NetApp filers.[7]
Technology
editZetta has been awarded several patents for its backup and disaster recovery technology, including for minimizing network bandwidth for replication/backup,[8] ensuring that the data that is replicated is the same, bit for bit, as on the source system[9] and is able to scale to Internet volumes of data.[10]
Zetta's agent eliminates network round trips by having a client side cache of the server state, extensive parallelism and WAN optimization.[11] Zetta also provides a mountable backup.
History
editZetta was founded in 2008 in Sunnyvale, California by Jeff Whitehead,[12] Lou Montulli, and Jason Harrison.[12] The current CEO is Mike Grossman.[13] Investors in Zetta include Sigma Partners, Foundation Capital, and Industry Ventures.[14][15][16] In July 2017, Marlin Equity Partners announced the merger of Zetta with Arcserve, based in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.[17]
References
edit- ^ Hilliard, John. "Nonprofit turns to Zetta.net to replace tape backup", TechTarget, 28 November 2012
- ^ Robb, Drew. "6 Great Cloud and Online Backup Solutions", InfoStor, 11 April 2012
- ^ "Zetta Launches Zetta Disaster Recovery Enabling Less-Than-Five Minute Failover from Anywhere", Zetta, 20 September 2016
- ^ Hardiman, Nick. "Cloud Backup and Disaster Recovery: The Zetta Approach", TechRepublic, 28 November 2012
- ^ Vance, Jeff. "Disaster Recovery: IT Pros Handle Hurricane Sandy", Enterprise Storage Forum, 30 November 2012
- ^ Smith, Lyle."Zetta Disaster Recovery Now Available", Storage Review, 20 September 2016
- ^ Weaver, Charles. "Zetta.net Rolls out DataProtect for NetApp" Archived December 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, MSP Alliance, 6 December 2012
- ^ "Systems and methods for minimizing network bandwidth for replication/back up US 9015122 B2", Google Patents, 21 April 2015
- ^ "Systems and methods for state consistent replication US 8977594 B2", Google Patents, 10 March 2015,
- ^ "Distributed Data Store", Google Patents, 6 October 2015
- ^ "Zetta improves DataProtect with WAN optimization", TechTarget, 18 June 2013
- ^ a b Zetta: About: Management
- ^ "Zetta Appoints Mike Grossman CEO", Yahoo Finance, Retrieved on 8 August 2013
- ^ Primack, Dan. "Venture Capital Deals" Archived July 16, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, CNN Money, 18 June 2013
- ^ Harris, Derrick. "Cloud Storage: Two Days, Three Startups, $30 Million", New York Times, 10 November 2010
- ^ Hesseldahl, Arik. "Cloud Storage Start-Up Zetta Lands $9 Million Funding Round", All Things D, 14 September 2011
- ^ "Marlin Equity Partners Acquires Zetta