12 Dec 2011
As has been widely reported, floods in Thailand are restricting hard drive supply, leading to inevitable price hikes. Here are three ways, using storage virtualisation, the channel can help its customers hedge against this.
A hypervisor remains a relatively new concept in the storage world; integrated arrays combining proprietary software and hardware stacks still dominate. However, applying the same rationale to storage hardware as we are long used to seeing with server virtualisation can provide huge advantages.
1. Open up the whole market
A storage hypervisor enables choice: disk becomes just disk, regardless of the vendor badge on the front. Virtual disk pooling anonymises the resource, nullifies vendor lock-in and provides the flexibility to choose whoever you like. And choice lowers costs.
2. Consider SSD
SSD production is less affected than HDD. Using automated storage tiering, customers can assign frequently accessed data to fast solid state disk and hive off less critical data to slower, cheaper formats.
3. Sweat the assets
Virtualising storage allows customers to repurpose and/or extend the life of existing kit. Pre-caching write requests in server RAM also enables significant performance improvements which, combined with thin provisioning, could reduce physical capacity requirements. Perhaps your customer won't need new disk after all?
Ruper Collier (pictured) is regional manager at DataCore Software
Add your comment
Native Format Optimization (NFO) reduces unstructured data on primary storage by 50-90%. In other words, you save 2-5x more files on your existing disks rather than throwing more and more disks after your storage. This gives you a lot more breathing space and you can view the HDD price rally rather relaxed...
Posted by Chris Schmid | 20 Dec 2011
Great post, but one technology is missing - NFO.
Native Format Optimization reduces the footprint of your unstructured files by 50-90% on primary storage, physical or virtual, and thus makes you 2-5 times more effiicent with your existing storage capacities...
So rather than adding disks, you could just make your existing storage work harder via NFO, reduce primary storage growth and therefore take out the pressure of always throwing more disks after your storage SAN or NAS.
Posted by Chris Schmid | 20 Dec 2011
Recent posts
Recent comments
by Vinny on Why Apple wants bigger bite of channel
by Jim PavI on Time for UC to get its act together
by Mike Pullon on Sociable selling
by Delia Ene on Making money from the cloud
by Chris Schmid on Three ways to avoid the HDD price hike