News
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Consolidation craze 16 October, 2002 14:29:22
Consolidation is having a dramatic impact on the storage market; hardware vendors are merging with each other as well as with application vendors, and integration specialists are following suit. The plummeting price of hardware is forcing vendors to offload manufacturing to third parties and get into the services game. Meanwhile, customers are doing a spring-clean through their IT departments to understand and maximise their assets and the result has server vendors concerned for their livelihood. Kevin Cosgriff reports. - +
Five technologies to know about in '07 28 March, 2007 12:14:42
Technologies that will make your computing life faster and more efficient - which means easier and happierIt seems like every month a new technology emerges with the potential to change everything. Technology writers and analysts get hyperexcited. Everyone starts patting one another on the back and hugging. And two years later, we're still talking about the promise of that technology, with little to show in the here and now. - +
Tape technology stretches out 10 September, 2003 09:39:53
Like many IT executives, Eric Eriksen, chief technology officer at New York-based Deloitte Consulting, would like tape to just go away. The added cost of managing tape backup systems, slow and unreliable restoration, cartridge inventorying and off-site storage headaches have him hoping that cheap disk drives may someday replace 50-year-old tape technology in the data center. - +
Past and future converge in wireless 27 October, 2004 15:25:34
Although there is no dispute that security has been a major impediment to the uptake of wireless, especially in large organisations, its impact may have been overestimated. As prices drop and demand for wireless grows, issues of manageability, speed and coverage are often raised as the major problems affecting most businesses. WLAN implementation expenses are approaching their wired equivalents, and the cost of ownership is also drawing growing numbers of enterprise customers into the wireless space. - +
Database management by automation 03 May, 2004 09:51:23
If you're one of those database managers who thinks Oracle must pride itself on making its database overly complicated and difficult to manage, Oracle Database 10g will be a refreshing change. Simplifying everything from installation to tuning and troubleshooting to backup and recovery, the new release is packed with features designed to make the DBA's job easier, either by completely automating tasks or by transferring control of important functions to the server. Gone are the days when you need a rocket scientist to run your database.
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A recent study of Independent Oracle User Group (IOUG) members found that 31 percent are managing databases larger than 1TB in size -- up from 13 percent who said that at the beginning of 2006.
The growth was fueled by increasing amounts of unstructured data, such as graphics, video and e-mail files, as well as data being generated from business and customer transactions, new devices and systems, and compliance requirements.
That rapid level of growth is creating concern among database administrators (DBAs).
According to the study, 60 percent of the 335 members of the Chicago-based IOUG reported that a lack of available storage has affected database performance, with others saying that they have delayed application rollouts because of a lack of storage resources.
Systems administrators and DBAs are taking over major decisions related to storage and day-to-day storage management in small to medium-sized companies. In large firms, however, dedicated storage administrators still hold sway. Ultimately, however, those roles are converging.
"Storage admins and decision-makers need a basic level of understanding about what an Oracle database needs for daily operations and optimal backup strategies such as exports and archived logs," said one respondent, a DBA with a government agency. "DBAs also need a basic understanding of storage architecture."
The greatest surge in storage demand comes from the utilities/transportation/energy/telecommunications sector, where 28 percent of users reported such growth.
One fallout from the trend is that those in charge of budgeting for storage growth say they are typically making estimates, and then tacking on safety margins of an additional 10 percent to 25 percent to account for unexpected growth.
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November Infringement Alert
Recently Microsoft® took legal action against individuals and resellers for distributing and selling unauthorised Microsoft software.









