Preparing your home and business for Hurricane Irene

As you take time to prepare for Hurricane Irene headed our way this weekend we recommend you take a few minutes and think about your IT disaster plan.  There are a few simple steps you can take before the storm hits to keep you in good shape:

 For your home:

  1. Check your backup and make sure it’s current.  Once you know it’s current make sure you have a backup offsite somewhere.  That can be anywhere you deem safe… the cloud, a safe location in your home (safe from water damage), or a relative’s house outside the storm range.  Just make sure your backup is up-to-date and that it’s in at least two locations. 
  2. Charge up all your devices like cell phones, laptops, and any other gadgets you may want to use to help weather the storm.  Don’t forget a battery powered radio!
  3. Pull out that old school telephone.  Any phone that needs to be plugged in won’t do you any good in a power outage. 
  4. Make sure all appliances are plugged into a surge strip.  Many small appliances have small computer components built in and are susceptible to damage during power surges (things like new refrigerators, washing machines etc).  If it’s not plugged into a decent surge strip unplug it for the duration of the storm. 
  5. Take care of all your online research before Irene hits.   If your power goes out you won’t have access to the internet since your cable modem/router will be down.   Don’t rely on your cell either since the network could be bogged down and unreliable.  Do your research and “googling” now. 

 For your business:

  1. Again, check your backups and make sure you have a copy offsite.   If your building gets flooded your backup is useless if all your backup tapes or drives are damaged with the server.
  2. Consider shutting down any servers, or large equipment.  If you think your power may go out for an extended period of time, or may go out and come back on unexpectedly we recommend shutting down for the duration of the storm.  Basic UPS devices typically last a short period of time and aren’t designed to keep your systems up for an extended period of time. 
  3. Check that all equipment is plugged into surge strips or power protection devices.  All equipment such as PCs, fax machines, printers, and postage meters are susceptible to damage from a surge.  If they are not in a strip unplug them.
  4. Print out a list of key contact information and bring it home with you.  This list should include key employees, important customers and clients, and vendor information.  If you can’t get into your systems on Monday you want to have the information handy if you need to make some calls. 

Why Windows 7 Might Not Appear Genuine After a Hardware Failure

 

What do you do after a hardware failure?

QUESTION

“I have just fixed my computer after a hardware failure. When I fixed it, the computer said it is not genuine. I have an official disk that I bought. Due to I installed this on multiple computers, I used a serial key on one and the one that crashed I used an activation bypass. What can I do to fix this problem?”

ANSWER
By: Mike Kingston 
technical support questions
Microsoft Windows can be picky when it comes to computer hardware changes. A major component change (such as motherboards) can cause Windows to not identify the computer as the same system it was first installed on. However, that usually results in needing to re-activate Windows.

Depending on the license type of Windows you purchased (OEM, Volume, Retail, etc.) you may or may not be within the licensing rights to install it on multiple computers, but if the serial key you used on the second install was not legitimate, or if it was a key that didn’t match the type of disc you used (Ex. using an OEM Dell Windows disc to reinstall Windows on an HP with and OEM HP license key), then you may have to reformat the PC with the legitimate CD and license key you purchased.

My recommendation would be to first attempt a Windows repair, which can be accessed from booting off the Windows CD, or if that fails, it may require a complete reformat and reinstallation of Windows on the computer system.

Set up a free, no obligation computer network consultation for your business today!