Monthly Technical Operations Maintenance Window – August 15, 2015

The DataYard Technical Operations team will begin the August Maintenance Window at 4:00AM EDT, Saturday, August 15, 2015 with an anticipated completion time of 11:00AM EDT on Saturday August 15, 2015.

During this month’s maintenance window, DataYard System Administrators will be installing security patches on all managed and shared servers. Service interruptions are expected to be brief, if they occur at all.

If you have any questions regarding this maintenance please contact our technical support team at 1.800.982.4539 or [email protected]. Remember to follow us on Twitter (@datayardtechops & @datayard) for the latest service and maintenance status updates as well as other happenings at DataYard.

Monthly Technical Operations Maintenance Window – July 18, 2015

The DataYard Technical Operations team will begin the monthly maintenance window for July at 5:00AM EDT, Saturday, July 18, 2015 with an anticipated completion time of 12:00PM EDT on Saturday July 18, 2015.

During this month’s maintenance window, DataYard System Administrators will be installing security patches on all managed and shared servers. We will also be updating the SSL configurations on our managed and shared Linux servers to provide better security against attacks like Logjam. Service interruptions are expected to be brief, if they occur at all.

If you have any questions regarding this maintenance please contact our technical support team at 1.800.982.4539 or [email protected]. Remember to follow us on Twitter (@datayardtechops) for the latest service and maintenance status updates as well as other happenings at DataYard.

In the Spotlight: Net Awards Nominees – Sparkbox and Wonderful Machine

In the Spotlight: Net Awards Nominees – Sparkbox and Wonderful Machine

DataYard’s friends vie for Agency of the Year and Redesign of the Year!

We love sharing good news about our friends, so when we heard that both Sparkbox and Wonderful Machine were nominated for net awards, we just had to tell you more!

Net awards

The net awards stand out because they’re not a pay to play recognition system. Nominations come from net magazine’s editorial team to recognize excellence in pushing the web forward—no entry fee and no application.

Nominated for Agency of the Year, Sparkbox stands out for us too! We spend a lot of time on the web and love to see different approaches to site design. The Sparkbox mission to make a more accessible and enjoyable web stands out in the sites they build and in their commitment to shared knowledge and education. Want to know how they rebuilt their own seesparkbox.com? No secrets, in fact, it’s a deep case study shared with everyone.

As site designers, though, Sparkbox knows that teamwork with the customer is key. Wonderful Machine was on a journey to rebrand, bringing a new logo to the game, and rebuilding their website from the ground up.

“We realized that the branding and website we were using to represent ourselves went against the advice we give to photographers every day, and it was time to take our own advice and start fresh,” blogged Creative Director Melissa Ginsiorsky.

Challenged with a need to be beautiful, device-independent, and database driven, Wonderful Machine joined with Sparkbox to build their vision. Working together, the collaboration is nothing short of impressive. We were honored at DataYard when these great teams selected us to host the platform that supports the new site.

Wonderful Machine’s net award nomination for Redesign of the Year is well-earned!

“Working with Wonderful Machine and Sparkbox through this re-design and deployment was a rewarding experience – even before I saw the beautiful site and learned of the nomination. I’m pumped for both of them, and pumped to be a part of their future,” says DataYard Account Manager Alek Mezera.

A rising tide lifts all boats.

There is more to these teams than just personal success. DataYard recognizes that making a better web helps everyone who builds sites and everyone who uses them too. It’s integral to our own mission, and key to the success of partnerships as we witnessed here.

“A very important part of my job here is working with photographers on their branding, giving them advice about how to present themselves (and their work) in the best light and letting them know when what they’re doing isn’t working,” shares Ginsiorsky. She was drawn not only to talent when she sought out Sparkbox to work on the new site, but also to the Sparkbox culture of giving back.

The Sparkbox crew’s Build Right initiative lets us all in on the game. Internal training, conference workshops, and the fabulous local Maker Series (with DataYard as a proud sponsor) have something for everyone collaborating on a site. This is the clincher that really binds these two business cultures into something truly special.

Vote for Success

We want you to help! Net awards voting remains open – through July 13, 2015. Use these links below to vote for:

SBCrestOne        wonderful machine logo
 Sparkbox!                       Wonderful Machine!

Monthly Technical Operations Maintenance Window – June 13, 2015

The DataYard Technical Operations team will begin the monthly maintenance window for June at 6:00AM EDT, Saturday, June 13, 2015 with an anticipated completion time of 12:00PM EDT on Saturday June 13, 2015.

During this month’s maintenance window, DataYard System Administrators will be installing updates and security patches on all managed and shared servers. Systems Administrators will also install updates and security patches to our Cloud and Virtual Data Center hosting infrastructure. DataYard Network Administrators will be performing maintenance and testing with our edge routers and upstream carriers. Any service interruptions are expected to be brief, if they occur at all.

If you have any questions regarding this maintenance please contact our technical support team at 1.800.982.4539 or [email protected]. Remember to follow us on Twitter (@datayard) for the latest service and maintenance status updates as well as other happenings at DataYard.

Upstream Carrier Maintenance Notification – June 10, 2015

One of DataYard’s upstream carriers, Cogent, will be performing scheduled carrier maintenance beginning at 12AM EST, June 10, 2015, to be completed by 5AM EST. No interruption to DataYard network services are expected. If you have any questions or concerns please contact us by dialing 937-226-6896 Option 2 or emailing [email protected].

New Flavors. New Updates. New OAMM.

Once a Month Meals’ redesign focused on helping visitors and members quickly get to the content they wanted.

Once A Month Meals (OAMM) is the premier site for all things freezer cooking. From their patent pending MenuBuilder product to the bustling community of members who love to cook and have fresh food on their table without the hassle of cooking from scratch every night.

In early March, OAMM launched a five month long project that was focused on bringing a streamlined experience to visitors and their current members. All facets of their technology were improved. The site design upgrade was the most notable, and it now focuses users on their lists of carefully curated menus and recipes. This change makes it much easier to search menus, recipes, and become a new member if the visitor chooses.

Joel Taylor (Technical Director for OAMM) said that the project was a huge undertaking as there are many different technical facets to how OAMM operates.

“OAMM runs on two custom Ruby on Rails apps, a WordPress install for its frontend and an Ember.js frontend for MenuBuilder. We built a new API from MenuBuilder to enable dynamic content to flow through WordPress to our visitors and members. Previously menus and recipes had to be published in both systems, and human error had twice the chance to introduce itself – not to mention double the workload. Now, we publish in one system, and it automatically populates throughout all our apps.”

Joel mentioned that DataYard was critical to their success in providing dedicated support throughout the redesign process for their server infrastructure needs.

“We had a couple meetings with DY in person discussing the new goals of our site and what technology we’d need in place to make our page load times sub three seconds. We have five web nodes all communicating to each other and three caching systems. If anyone knows WordPress well, they know how critical it is to cache well. We couldn’t just flip on page caching due to dynamic content for our logged in members, therefore caching our API responses and other pieces of communicated data was vital for page speed. Being able to talk through our infrastructure options with DY was one of the best hosting provider experiences I’ve had.”

The OAMM team worked very closely with their long-term partner, Sparkbox. Sparkbox provided OAMM with content strategy, their new design and a lot of the heavy lifting on the API.

“OAMM came to Sparkbox several years ago with a belief that families should eat together. With this vision, we helped them turn their previously cumbersome, manual process into a robust, customized piece of software that allowed users to create their own freezer menus—thanks to the years of experience the OAMM team already had in perfecting menu plans. We were excited to work with OAMM during the redesign to turn this robust backend system for managing menus and recipes into an API that now drives the entire site. The redesign also included updates to the brand to further evolve it into the smart and approachable product it had become. It has been a lot of fun to help grow and adapt the site with the OAMM team.” – Rob Harr, Vice President, Sparkbox

Tricia Callahan (President and Owner of OAMM) says that the redesign project had been long overdue.

“The greatest goal for our recent redesign was to create a cohesive experience for our users between our community and our product. As we worked to achieve this goal, it was important that we also increase site performance and functioning. This was no easy task as we have several appliances feeding into our WordPress site so we knew we needed some unique solutions. Throughout the process we received tailored support and recommendations from the DataYard team that made the cumbersome and delicate process of this redesign easier to manage. Most notably, they took their time to carefully consider how these changes could be made without disrupting the experience of our current users, giving me the peace of mind as a business owner.”

DataYard was thrilled to be a part of the project, and is proud to continually deliver the service, uptime, and performance that any high volume and subscription driven site demands. From both the technical and business perspectives, the match is one made in heaven.

“Working with Joel at OAMM on their environment is always enjoyable and collaborative. Continuing to improve the site performance – from an infrastructure and server application perspective – is always the primary goal, and something I’m happy to be a part of.” – Ryan Chewning, Systems Administrator, DataYard

 “The intersection of creative firms and DataYard as an infrastructure partner is one which seems incredibly natural. Every project I’m involved in with folks like Tricia, Joel, and the team at Sparkbox is awesome. When design, development, and infrastructure work together towards a common and communicated purpose, it’s a beautiful thing.” – Alek Mezera, Account Manager, DataYard

Visit Once A Month Meals’ site for delicious inspiration and membership information!

WordPress updates raise CMS security questions

“By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.” –Benjamin Franklin

WordPress vulnerabilities and exploits have filled the press lately, with 3 urgent security releases in the past month alone. The popular content management service (CMS) powers nearly one quarter of the web, making WordPress a ripe target for exploitation and a big concern for website owners and visitors to those sites.

A recent study from W3Techs shares that 47% of WordPress users only back up their sites “every few months,” with 25% saying they’re not trained in using WordPress at all. If exploited, however, nearly 25% say they would pay “almost anything” to get the lost data back. Add that to another 20% who would pay “several thousand dollars” to recover, and we’ve got almost half of WordPress users who recognize the price of inaction.

Why are these sites so vulnerable? In failing to prepare. Nearly half of the respondents reported having no IT or Website Manager. They are using WordPress because the CMS makes editing and adding site content easy for an everyday user. Sales and marketing teams are often left minding the shop with little to no technical training on the backend of the website.

WordPress itself is very responsive when it comes to releasing updates to patch holes as they come up, but they have to be implemented.

Where do you stand?

If you’re using the fully hosted WordPress.com solution, then the updates are part of the package. If you’re using the self-hosted WordPress.org solution, then it’s up to you to be prepared. (Not sure? More here.)

On self-hosted websites, the key is in how rapidly the security updates and patches are adopted. Security updates and patches are boring maintenance items, often not included in the overall website plan.

What can you lose?

Walking through the door to Customer Service, you see they’re really hopping already with email, chats, phones… Wow! Then, you catch the conversation in the room, and you realize there’s something wrong. Really wrong.

The site is not doing what it’s supposed to be doing. Content has changed. Customers are being redirected to odd places. They report suspicious pop-ups and installation requests. Some even, trusting you, have allowed these things to run.

Your website is doing a lot…of all the wrong things. You’ve been hacked.

Websites drive revenue, provide information, collect donations, and communicate on your behalf. When the site stops working, your mission and reputation are in jeopardy. If you collect information on your users, breach of privacy may open you up to additional cost and liability.

What can you do?

Designers and developers build content, behavior, graphics, features, shopping carts, etc. It’s tested and then deployed to a hosting provider. After a final check, the keys are turned over to the company.  If it’s up to you, what do you do?

First, WordPress is not alone.  Open-source (WordPress, Drupal, Joomla) and proprietary CMS platforms are all susceptible to exploit.

As a hosting provider for many self-hosted websites built on a variety of CMS platforms, what do we see? How do successful sites not only launch, but also remain secure and successful?

Know your CMS.

Communication is the key. When you’re building your website, get everyone together, and keep them talking on a regular basis. Ask a lot of questions along the way.

  • What CMS forms the foundation of the site? What permissions can be set for users? Many users posting content to the site may not need permission to change core elements about the site’s base architecture.
  • What plug-ins or add-ons contribute to the functionality? While recent exploit targeted the core WordPress CMS, these integrated programs interact with the sites and can also be targets for getting past site security.
  • Does your CMS have an auto-update function? WordPress offers a few options that can be set to help keep you current. If not, does the CMS offer alerts or an update blog site so that you can stay current on any issues?
  • What must be managed manually? Major version changes of the core CMS often require compatibility testing and are often not automatic as a result. Set up a testing and release schedule for these big changes.
  • Staying on the current version means that you’ll also stay up to date with the most recent security patches. Seen in every technology platform, end of life for a version means no one will be trying to keep it patched and stable.

Know your role.

Remember that survey. Nearly half of site owners would spend thousands, if not “almost anything” to recover lost data. That’s a lot of Benjamins.

It is like a good insurance policy, and a better use of resources, to plan for maintenance instead of praying and paying for miracles after you experience a loss.

IT resources are needed to manage and maintain the live website. You don’t have to be that expert yourself, but don’t forget to budget for routine maintenance and updates when you’re allocating IT resources.

If you don’t have in-house expertise, consider a management agreement with your developer. Like oil changes for car, it’s part of the price of ownership.

Know your hosting provider.

Not all hosting providers are created equal. Your hosting provider should be an active partner: at a minimum, keeping the Windows- or Linux-based infrastructure stable, secure, and updated in its own right.

As a provider ourselves, we’re a bit biased here at DataYard. We think that a hosting provider should be so much more!

Customer service and support expertise are vital. At DataYard, we love being included in a website’s overall design and development from Day One. We’re experts on our hosting platform, the options available, and maximizing the architecture’s performance for your site.

We talk to you about the site architecture itself, and making sure it’s backed up on a regular schedule. Regular backups mean no mad scramble to see if anything can be recovered.

“When we work with the developers as a site is under construction, we look for bottlenecks to performance,” shares Ryan Chewning, DataYard Systems Administrator. “Most security plugins in WordPress, for example, are incompatible with one another even when they’re fine separately. Some of the security plug-ins help drop malicious connections rapidly, keeping system resources readily available.”

For those building a new website to replace an existing site with active customers, we have extra considerations. Ryan explains, “The user experience during any change is important, from incorporating plug-ins that seamlessly bridge site versions to minimizing any downtime needed to complete the transition.”

The relationship with your hosting provider should not stop when the site goes live. Active management is a valuable element to keeping your website healthy. A DataYard managed account is monitored for performance. With success and more traffic, needs change over time. Ryan concludes, “We watch for performance degradation and make proactive recommendations to keep the site growing along with you.”

What next?

Since your website ties to your bottom line, the bottom line is that you don’t want to trust it to just anyone. If you’re not sure what you have, now’s the time to ask. If you need some help looking at where you are and where you want to be, remember to ask your trusted partners here at DataYard.

Monthly Technical Operations Maintenance Window – May 16, 2015

Monthly Technical Operations Maintenance Window – May 16, 2015

The DataYard Technical Operations team will begin the monthly maintenance window for May at 6:00AM EDT, Saturday, May 16, 2015 with an anticipated completion time of 12:00PM EDT on Saturday May 16, 2015.

During this month’s maintenance window, DataYard System Administrators will be installing security patches on all managed and shared servers.  Service interruptions are expected to be brief, if they occur at all.

If you have any questions regarding this maintenance please contact our technical support team at 1.800.982.4539 or [email protected]. Remember to follow us on Twitter (@datayard) for the latest service and maintenance status updates as well as other happenings at DataYard.

In the Spotlight: Cope’s Jumps into NASCAR

As a new NASCAR sponsor, Cope’s Distributing races to new heights. 

Spring rains, budding flowers, green grass, and the sound of racing! Greenville’s Cope’s Distributing hops on board with NASCAR, as a sponsor  on Tommy Regan’s #45 — “The Gun Truck.”

With both a retail store and large Internet business that takes firearms distribution nationwide, a NASCAR sponsorship brings in a new audience, and an increased demand on the technical resources of their Internet portal.

It all started when DataYard Account Manager Alek Mezera called Roger Cope, President of Cope’s Distributing, to check in.

“When Roger told me of Cope’s plans to sponsor Tommy’s truck, their video series, and Facebook ticket contest, I knew we needed to take a look at the hosting setup to ensure uptime and availability during this high-visibility campaign,” says Mezera.

“We started by segmenting the server roles onto two VIPs for web and database services, and built the new configuration to quickly accept new additional web nodes if necessary.”

This level of communication is part and parcel of the relationship DataYard has built with Cope’s, in listening and customizing to their specific needs. The attention doesn’t surprise Roger. “We make a phone call and they’re right there,” he says. “I recommend DataYard to literally everybody that’s looking.”

How is The Gun Truck doing? The team kicked off their season on March 28 in Martinsville, placing 32nd, and are headed for the Kansas Speedway on May 8! You can follow the team on their website, via Facebook, and on Twitter (@theguntruck45).

Thanks to Cope’s Distributing for letting us share their story! We want to tell YOUR story too!  Let us know what you’re doing, so we can shine the Spotlight on you!

LEARN MORE about Cope’s Distributing and DataYard.

 

The End is Near… for Windows Server 2003

3 months. No reprieve.

Microsoft executives and media spokespeople are out in force, emphasizing that Windows Server 2003 is headed out to pasture, with end of life (EOL) slated for July 14, 2015 (Yes, THIS July 14). With EOL, Microsoft ceases providing updates, service patches, and support for between an estimated 1 and 12 million servers worldwide.

So, if you’re still facing this challenge, you are clearly not alone. This one’s not just a simple update, as infrastructure that supported Windows Server 2003 (WS2003) can’t handle what’s now needed: Windows Server 2012 R2 (WS2012 R2).

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

Aside from appalling grammarians everywhere, this feeling is easy to understand. Most users don’t have visibility to the full brokenness of older operating systems. After all:

  • The applications that the old systems have been running for over a decade (!) now still run.
  • The systems have been that solid for that long, so support or updates shouldn’t be needed because you know they work and are used to their quirks.
  • Besides, upgrading can break things and will surely make them different.
  • With expensive hardware required, this is a messy and costly proposition.

Assuming that most of us haven’t been using the same toothbrush for a decade, and that we don’t expect the same showroom performance out of a 10 year old car, it’s time to face this one head on.

Why change then?

Servers don’t exist in a vacuum. They provide essential services that need to stay up and running. Failing to stay current opens businesses up to serious vulnerabilities:

  • Productivity. Crashes, system downtime, and wasted personnel resources all drain energy from business tasks as you waste time fixing IT issues and patching workarounds. This costs in time and in money. It costs nearly double to fix systems that are over 4 years old.
  • Security. Starting July 15, no new updates or patches means no fixes to newly found security threats. No change means risking the availability of services, the confidentiality of data, and the privacy of customers’ data.
  • Compliance. Most industries have legal compliance requirements in meeting current technical standards, and customers themselves have compliance and regulatory demands included in contractual service level agreements (SLAs). Being out of compliance breaks the SLAs, resulting in fines or loss of business. Accepting credit card payments? Without updates, Visa and MasterCard are on the record that they’ll have to refuse business due to lack of PCI (Payment Cards Industry) compliance.
  • Support. Most hosting companies and technology professionals will be unable to continue to support WS2003 systems. No updates means that they won’t be able to meet their own SLA requirements.
  • Competition. Competitors using new technology are at an advantage. What is out of date? If your operating system is over 5 years old, 61% of your customers say you’re outdated! Moving on to the newest platform will let you more quickly add new systems, set up new users, allow for remote operation, faster response times, etc., bringing a better service to internal users and to customers. The newer platform (WS2012 R2) offers a streamlined and efficient approach for remote accessibility, more options for storage and automation, and greater security.

What now?

IT professionals know the problem and don’t really need convincing. Time being short, it’s time now to push through organizational inertia to get moving.

Since it’s not advisable to cross your fingers and hope for the best with WS2003, migration is the answer with two choices of destination:

  • New assets. Invest in new replacement hardware and software for your infrastructure.
  • Take it to the cloud. Take this time where migration is required anyway and move your infrastructure to a hosted solution. Divest yourself from taking on the cost of owning the assets or the headaches of managing them.

Why are we here?

DataYard’s Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) provides a cloud solution that’s still close to home and managed by those you’ve come to trust. We understand that the ultimate connection for the technology we maintain are the people relying upon it. We give you people you can rely on to get the job done. Take it to the cloud without sacrificing control.

Our mission at DataYard is simple. We want our customers to focus on their businesses while we serve as trusted technology partners, keeping essential technology infrastructure stable, reliable, secure and redundant. Mission critical applications and data need to be available and error-free so that, like electricity, you forget about it and just run your business.

If you’re facing the migration from Windows Server 2003, you want experts on your side. 90 days is not too late to start. A review of migration stories across the web shows many successful and fairly complex migrations were actually achieved in 60-90 days. In fact, most migrations took two to three times as long to go through the approval process (“Do we have to?”) than through the actual planning and execution of the migration.

DataYard has scalable cloud options that get you out of the hardware business, while keeping your operations secure and local with people you know and trust. No solution is canned and out of the box. We’ll sit down with you to see where you are and where you need to be. Then we find you the best path to get there.

Get current now, and then stay current as technology continues to evolve. Staying with our hosted solutions will keep you current moving forward. As updates and newer platforms are released, we’ll be with you on that path together.

Each DataYard solution is tailored to fit your needs exactly, including making sure you have the level of management control over your own system that you need. Give us a call and let us help you make the best decisions you can for your business.