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Sunday | 12 October, 2008
ARN

Storage: Features

Features
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    BlueArc Titan 3200 a giant among NAS systems 19 August, 2008 03:18:00

    The new BlueArc Titan 3200 shows significantly improved performance over previous models.
    We don't have Olympic Games for file server systems but the SPEC SFS (System File Server) benchmark serves as the next best thing, providing a comparable rank of file server performance. If you sifted through all of the SPEC SFS results published to the SPEC Web site, you'd find that the fastest NAS systems are from NetApp, BlueArc, and EMC, who take what in Beijing would have been a gold, a silver, and a bronze medal, in that order.
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    Diving deep into Amazon Web Services 14 August, 2008 08:43:00

    From storage to payment, Amazon is dangling an array of low-cost services – but will customers bite?
    Amazon's Web Services (AWS) are based on a simple concept: Amazon has built a globe-spanning hardware and software infrastructure that supports the company's Internet business, so why not modularize components of that infrastructure and rent them? It is akin to a large construction company in the business of building interstate highways hiring out its equipment and expertise for jobs such as putting in a side road, paving a supermarket parking lot, repairing a culvert, or just digging a backyard swimming pool.
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    Transforming the data center from hell 24 July, 2008 08:23:53

    Getting the ultimate performance out of deficient facilities
    Some CIOs and data center managers have found themselves having to wring performance out of monstrously deficient facilities. Ultimately, these three wrestled with their infrastructures, made major changes and won the day.
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    Solid-state disk will go mainstream in 3, 2, 1... 14 July, 2008 09:40:36

    Solid-state disks cost about $3.45 per gigabyte, hard drives about $0.38 per gigabyte
    Solid-state disk, once considered a niche technology for ruggedized, industrial and military applications, is on its way to the mainstream. This is partly because of SSD benefits, which include performance, power efficiency, ruggedness and a lightweight, compact size. But other developments have also come into play, including technology and market developments that have begun to help this technology overcome its pitfalls -- namely capacity, reliability and price.
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    Storage in the sky 02 July, 2008 12:28:55

    With a new era of Web 2.0 applications and government data retention regulations coming to the fray, storage capacities are hitting the roof. But concepts such as storage-as-a-service and cloud computing are shaking up the traditional hardware-oriented storage market and raising those boundaries.
    Five, four, three, two, one and it's done. It's certainly no magic trick but that's about as many minutes as it can take to completely backup data from a laptop over an Internet connection through a remote storage service. Whenever the data is needed again, presto - it will reappear on demand. And as large organisations continue breaking storage limits, shipping data to an offsite or Internet-based location in this manner is increasingly viewed as a remedy to painful storage swelling.
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    Flash storage gets enterprise attention as prices decline 26 June, 2008 09:59:16

    Consumer flash popularity, EMC's entry into market combine to drive prices down
    The little USB stick on your keychain and the memory in your iPod is fueling a revolution in the enterprise storage world.
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    Five lessons of a datacenter overhaul 19 June, 2008 08:53:04

    A datacenter makeover and migration can go wrong in many ways. Do as we suggest, not as we did.
    What are the three most important ingredients of a successful project? Planning, planning, planning. For our datacenter makeover at the University of Hawaii's School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, we planned early and often, and still got bit by last-minute surprises and devilish details that cost us time and money. We'll do it a little different next time. You too can learn from our mistakes.
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    Pimp my data center 19 June, 2008 08:53:11

    What happens when you build the datacenter you really want?
    More servers, more racks, more UPSes, more users -- the reasons for expanding a datacenter are the same everywhere. Today's datacenter projects, however, have the additional component of modernisation. Rebuilding takes place for tighter integration, greener power usage, greater redundancy, and especially more control. Datacenter administrators would control individual dust motes in their racks if they could.
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    The five biggest storage trends 18 June, 2008 08:12:59

    Data growth is just one factor influencing the way information is preserved within corporate IT systems. EMC predicts that 10 Gig Ethernet can co-exist with Fiber Channel, and talks about why tape won’t go obsolete
    The explosive growth of data has made information storage management ever critical within the enterprise. But data growth aside, major issues and trends in storage technology are injecting added complexity to that storage strategy. Industry experts identify some of these influencing factors on the enterprise.
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    Is Google your next data center? 18 June, 2008 07:56:50

    Cloud computing is changing the way we think of the IT department
    Jonathan Snyder's five-person team at Dreambuilder Investments isn't your typical IT organization. Or is it?
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    Five hot -- and cool -- storage technologies 16 June, 2008 11:09:57

    By 2010, we'll be creating close to one trillion gigabytes of data. Here's a look at some of the technologies that will manage all that information
    Down economy or not, the growing appetite for enterprise data storage won't be sated anytime soon, if ever. The rise of data-heavy multimedia files, new customer touchpoints, evolving reporting and compliance standards and other trends are contributing to near exponential growth rates in the amount of data created and stored in the digital universe.
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Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

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Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

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Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

Play
ARN news
Play
Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

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