Posts Tagged ‘Storage’

OCZ Launches Z-Drive R4 CloudServ 16 TB Solid State Storage System

February 16th, 2012

A leading provider of high-performance solid-state drives (SSDs) for computing devices and systems, today announced the Z-Drive R4 CloudServ PCI Express (PCIe) flash storage solution, designed to dramatically accelerate cloud computing applications and significantly reduce operating expenses in the data center. The new Z-Drive R4 CloudServ features monumental data throughput, and raises the bar in performance and capacity.

“The Z-Drive R4 CloudServ PCIe solid state drive delivers game-changing performance and enables clients to process massive data-sets with up to 16TB of storage capacity on a single, easy-to-deploy card,” said Ryan Petersen,  CEO of OCZ Technology. “With this new solution, system architects are able to design more efficient and dynamic cloud computing infrastructures while simultaneously reducing system complexity and the high maintenance costs associated with traditional infrastructures.”

With increasing emphasis on cloud computing and the sheer growth in data, PCIe-based flash storage systems have the ability to bypass traditional storage overhead by reducing latencies, increasing throughput, and enabling efficient processing of massive quantities of data. The Z-Drive R4 CloudServ is capable of transferring multiple gigabytes per second and delivering over a million IOPS with a level of concentrated performance that enables system architects to design more productive infrastructures while lowering costs associated with hardware failure, maintenance, structural footprint, and energy consumption.

The latest evolution of the Z-Drive R4, the CloudServ, is specifically designed for the most demanding cloud computing applications with increased capacities and even greater bandwidth capabilities delivering up to 1.4 million IOPS. Melding hardware and software managed solutions with OCZ’s integrated Virtualized Controller Architecture(TM) (VCA) 2.0 and OCZ’s SANRAD VXL virtual acceleration caching software, the Z-Drive R4 CloudServ can be employed as a high-performing host-based flash cache that works in conjunction with the VXL to dynamically allocate flash resources to accelerate all virtual machines. This maximizes the performance of critical applications and provides a seamless migration from one host to another without the loss of cache data. As these virtual machines are migrated from one host to another, they must retain full access to the flash cache without loss of performance or interruption of service. OCZ’s SANRAD VXL software is the only software that allows for this seamless migration without loss of access to the flash cache.

The Z-Drive R4 CloudServ PCIe SSD will be available in models ranging from 300GB-16TB capacities throughout OCZ’s global channel in the coming weeks. As with all OCZ enterprise products, customer-specific configurations and functionality are available upon request.

Source:http://www.itnewsonline.com/news/OCZ-Launches-Z-Drive-R4-CloudServ-16-TB-Solid-State-Storage-System/26307/3/3

£4bn framework launched for hardware from tablets to servers and storage

February 7th, 2012

The Government Procurement Service has advertised for suppliers to join a wide-ranging £4bn ICT framework.

The framework will be open to public sector organisations for two years, according to a notice in the Official Journal of the European Union, and covers the following lots:

• Desktop client devices: which will include desktop computers, keyboards, mice and computer memory. The GPS says it expects three suppliers to be awarded agreements.

• Laptops equipment: including notebook devices, port replicators/docking stations, and associated equipment, for which four suppliers will be signed up.

• Tablet/slate devices: five suppliers will be awarded contracts.

• Monitor device equipment: to include wall brackets for monitors; desk stands for monitors and speakers, and three contractors are expected to be signed up.

• Thin client devices: contract awarded to three companies.

• Servers: to include tower, rack and blade servers, server chassis/standard racks, power supply units, server hard disks, hard disk arrays and server memory. Three suppliers will be signed up.

• Storage devices: delivered by three suppliers.

• Network switch devices: delivered by three suppliers.

• Desktop printers: to include printer memory, paper trays and power cables and delivered by five suppliers.

• ICT peripherals: awarded to three suppliers.

• Non-standard products related to desktop hardware, services and solutions, which will be awarded to five suppliers.

• Non-standard infrastructure hardware, services and solutions, for which eight companies are sought.

The framework will be open to include central government departments and their arm’s length bodies and agencies, non-departmental public bodies, NHS organisations and local councils.

Source:http://www.guardian.co.uk/government-computing-network/2012/feb/06/gps-four-billion-ict-framework?newsfeed=true

IBM developing new, tiny storage device of just 12 atoms

January 16th, 2012

Researchers at IBM have stored and retrieved digital 1s and 0s from an array of just 12 atoms, pushing the boundaries of the magnetic storage of information to the edge of what is possible.

The findings, being reported Thursday in the journal Science, could help lead to a new class of nanomaterials for a generation of memory chips and disk drives that will not only have greater capabilities than the current silicon-based computers but will also consume significantly less power. And it may offer a new direction for research in quantum computing.

“Magnetic materials are extremely useful and strategically important to many major economies, but there aren’t that many of them,” said Shan X. Wang, director of the Center for Magnetic Nanotechnology at Stanford University. “To make a brand new material is very intriguing and scientifically very important.”

Until now, the most advanced magnetic storage systems have needed about 1 million atoms to store a digital 1 or 0. The new achievement is the product of a heated international race between two elite physics laboratories to explore the properties of magnetic materials at a far smaller scale.

Last May, a group at the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Hamburg in Germany reported on the ability to perform computer logic operations on an atomic level.

The group at IBM’s Almaden Research Center here, led by Andreas Heinrich, has now created the smallest possible unit of magnetic storage by painstakingly arranging two rows of six iron atoms on a surface of copper nitrite atoms. The cluster of atoms is described as anti-ferromagnetic – a rare quality in which each atom in the array has an opposed magnetic orientation. (In common ferromagnetic materials like iron, nickel and cobalt, the atoms are magnetically aligned.)

Under the laboratory’s founder, Don Eigler, IBM has explored the science of nanomaterials far smaller than the silicon chips used in today’s semiconductors. Eigler recently retired from the company but is a co-author of the Science paper.

The researchers now use a scanning tunneling microscope, which looks like a giant washing machine festooned with aluminum foil, not only to capture images of atoms but to reposition individual atoms – much the way a billiard ball might be moved by a pool cue with a sticky tip.

Although the research took place at temperatures near absolute zero, the scientists wrote that the same experiment could be done at room temperature with as few as 150 atoms.

As part of its demonstration of the anti-ferromagnetic storage effect, the researchers created a computer byte, or character, out of an individually placed array of 96 atoms. They then used the array to encode the IBM motto “Think”

by repeatedly programming the memory block to store representations of its five letters.

Moreover, Heinrich said, smaller groups of atoms begin to exhibit quantum mechanical behavior – simultaneously existing in both “spin” states, in effect 1 and 0 at the same time. In theory, such atoms could be assembled into Qbits – the basic unit of an experimental approach to computing that might one day push beyond the capabilities of today’s most powerful supercomputers.

“If you do this with two atoms, then they behave more like a quantum mechanical object,” Heinrich said. “This is why science is interested in this work more than the technology.”

In an interview in a small laboratory office here, he said he was planning to knock out a wall to create room for an expanded effort in exploring the quantum mechanical properties of the anti-ferromagnetic effect.

“This is really where we live,” he said. “If you step outside of the press release, we are trying to control the quantum mechanics of this spin behavior to coax them to do whatever we want them to do.”

Computer industry analysts said the IBM effort heralded a new direction for nanotechnology and that it might offer a route to new kinds of nanomaterials.

“Nanotechnology labs are going to begin asking, ‘What else is going on down there?”‘ said Richard Doherty of Envisioneering, an industry consulting firm based in Seaford, N.Y. “The information storage side of this is fantastic, but this truly changes our ideas of the behavior of materials at molecular levels.”

Currently, anti-ferromagnetic materials are instrumental in two different types of data storage products. They are essential for the manufacture of the phonograph-needle-like recording heads used in today’s hard-disk drives. They are also used in a new type of memory chip known as spin-transfer-torque RAM, or STT-RAM, which is viewed by some as a future competitor for both DRAM and Flash memory chips.

Heinrich said that the tiny devices built with scanning tunneling microscopes would never be more than laboratory experiments. However, he noted that many research groups are exploring different ways of designing novel materials using self-assembly methods ranging from mechanical to biological approaches.

Industry executives said that as the semiconductor industry draws closer to exhausting the ability to scale down today’s circuits using lithographic tools that etch patterns on the surface of silicon wafers, an intense international hunt is under way for a manufacturing technology beyond microelectronics.

“The nation that discovers the next logic switch will lead the nanoelectronics era and reap the economic rewards associated with it,” said Ian Steff, vice president for global policy and technology partnerships for the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Source:http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-01-13/news/30623828_1_atoms-scanning-tunneling-microscope-almaden-research-center

DiskCrypt turns any laptop storage into a self-encrypted drive

January 13th, 2012

At CES, Singapore-based ST Electronics was showing off a new security device that can be installed in nearly any notebook computer to protect its data from prying eyes—Digisafe DiskCrypt, a hard-disk enclosure that turns any 1.8-inch micro-SATA device into removable and fully encrypted storage. The enclosure, which is the size of a 2.5″ drive, can be used as a drop-in replacement for existing drives.

Some of the biggest data breaches have happened because of lost or stolen storage. I have some personal experience in this department: I’ve had my personal information potentially exposed on a few occasions now, including once in 2006 by the theft of a laptop and unencrypted external drive from an employee of Department of Veterans Affairs. As a result, at-rest encryption of data has become a major issue for companies trying to prevent data breaches from laptops that grow legs, lest they run afoul of Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, or other regulations.

One solution is encrypting the contents of the drive with software like Bitlocker or Mac OS X’s FileVault. But even with AES encryption, software-based approaches aren’t always a deterrent to a determined attacker—keys can sometimes be recovered from the PC’s memory.

That’s why the Trusted Computing Group, an industry standards organization focused on security standards, has been pushing self-encrypting storage as a solution. Self-encrypting drives keep the key on cryptographic firmware on the disk itself, and all of the data on the disk—even the operating system—is encrypted. Zap the crypto on the drive’s firmware, and the drive is as good as erased, since it can’t be recovered practically.

DiskCrypt takes a similar approach, providing firmware within the enclosure that performs pass-through encryption and decryption. It uses AES encryption, and has a NIST FIPS 140-2 level 1 certified cryptographic module—meaning that it has been certified by the feds for basic information security, but not for classified information, as it’s specifically single-user. The encryption module is available in 128-bit electronic codebook (ECB) and 256-bit ECB or cipher-block chaining (CBC) versions.

Before boot, DiskCrypt requires a USB dongle to be plugged in to pass the key, and it can also be optionally configured to require the user to enter a password for two-factor authentication. The hardware can handle up to150MBps of data throughput, so once it has been activated it’s completely transparent. ST Electronics’ deputy director Jimmy Neo claimed the encryption module has no impact on read/write performance.

All this is pretty standard for a self-encrypted drive. The main advantage of DiskCrypt is that it can be put into nearly any existing notebook. If there’s a drive failure, a need to move from hard disk to SSD—or just swap out the drive—the enclosure can be quickly opened and the storage device popped out. Separated from the encryption enclosure, the drive is practically the same as destroyed.

Source:http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2012/01/device-turns-any-laptop-storage-into-a-self-encrypted-drive.ars

Pogoplug Launches New Hardware, Brings Unlimited Storage To Your PC

December 15th, 2011

Pogoplug is launching the fourth generation of its flagship product today, the Pogoplug Series 4. As with all Pogoplug hardware, the new device lets you attach your hard drives and plugs into your router in order to instantly give you your own personal cloud of online storage.

The service also comes with 5 GB of free online storage optimized for mobile users, and allows you to purchase additional cloud storage, if need be. However, all users of the Pogoplug device who host their own storage, can do so for free.

The pricing for the updated Pogoplug hardware remains the same as before: $99.99. It offers four different types of connections, including USB 3.0 (x2), USB 2.0 (x1), SATA/USM (x1) and SD Card (x1).

The hardware is designed to work with Pogoplug’s accompanying software suite, a freemium offering that allows you to stream your storage photos, music and movies to any PC or Mac via the web, or to your smartphone or tablet. The premium version ($29) includes the the ability to stream to any connected device, not just home computers. And for those not interested in buying any hardware, the software can function on its own to turn your computer into a software-based version of Pogoplug.

The company also offers a cheaper Pogoplug Mobile device for $79 which works with iOS and Android via mobile apps, offering mobile-specific features like automatic backup of mobile photos and videos, which, for Android users, offers something similar to Apple’s iCloud for their platform. The mobile product also works to convert your media into streamable bite-sized formats that are better for mobile viewing and sharing.

The bigger question with Pogoplug, and its now almost dizzying (and, yeah, I’m gonna say it: confusing) array of choices is why someone would choice this option over those from cloud storage and services companies including Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Dropbox, Box.net and others?

While it’s true that those using the software only (no device) and those who want mobile-optimized content and backup, will have to pay for additional storage beyond the 5 GB, no-frills Pogoplug users get everything for free, save for the one-time purchase price involved with buying the hardware. And that is a bargain, even if Pogoplug’s cloud is not.

And Pogoplug is especially helpful for those of you who, like me, have about 5 old USB hard drives laying around the house, all with content you would like access to from anywhere, but no easy way to just get them online.

Source:http://techcrunch.com/2011/12/14/pogoplug-launches-new-hardware-brings-unlimited-storage-to-your-pc/

LaCie’s Got a 12big Rack Storage Server, And It’s Nearly $12,000

December 9th, 2011

If you thought all Big Racks were awesome, well, you’re probably right. Childish jokes aside (seriously, we apologize for that one), LaCie has just announced their new 12big Rack Storage Server, described as a comprehensive network storage solution complete with the software and hardware needed for serious backup or file sharing right out of the box. The 12big Rack Storage Server features the performance of Quad LANs and the power of Windows Storage Server. With muscular performance and outstanding scalability at a competitive price point, the 12big Rack Storage Server is the perfect solution for corporate backup and file sharing. It is powered by the industry-standard Windows Storage Server 2008 R2, Microsoft’s latest version of the powerful NAS platform. The 12big Rack Storage Server ships with 6Gb/s Nearline SAS disks, which feature redundant path technology that improve I/O results by more than 40%.

As for specs, it’s got a quad-core Xeon CPU with 4GB of RAM, NAS-to-NAS backup and file serving, I/O ports to connect external storage and integrate as a JBOD array for massive scalability – up to 144TB, Hardware RAID controller, which supports RAID Levels 0, 1, 5, 10, 50 or 60, five free PCIe slots for dedicated applications such as 10Gb Ethernet, fibre channel, or InfiniBand, and the ability to configure as an iSCSI target or initiator to allow storage expansion in a cost-effective way. The 12big Rack Storage Server is available in 9TB, 12TB, 24TB and 36TB capacities with the 5-year Gold Protection Plan for premium support. The protection plan features warranty on drives and components, as well as fast product replacement. The 12big Rack Storage Server is available through LaCie Online Store, LaCie PROgram+ Partners, and LaCie PROgram+ Resellers starting at $11,299.00. Yes. Over $11k. Pony up!

Source:http://hothardware.com/News/LaCies-Got-a-12big-Rack-Storage-Server-And-Its-Nearly-12000/

To Manage Big Data, You Need Smarter Storage

August 23rd, 2011

Information is power, and having it at your fingertips is a reality in today’s smartphone obsessed world.

A recent report by the Pew Internet & American Life Project shows more than 35% of U.S. adults own smartphones. More compelling is that one out of four smartphone owners do online tasks through their mobile device rather than a computer.

What these users don’t think about is how much data they are generating in the process. The combined amount of tablet and smartphone traffic is predicted to generate 2.7 exabytes of data per month in 2015. That’s nearly 3 times all the mobile data generated in the U.S. in 2010.

Information overload has become an epidemic, and, not just from mobile devices. Information is increasing nearly 50% each year driven by armies of sensors, email, social networks and cloud computing.

This data influx is exponential. More than 75% of the data in the world today was created in the last two years. Facebook allows users to share 30 billion pieces of content each month. Twitter’s active user base generates 140 million tweets per day. Combined, these sites create 17 terabytes of data every day.

This new data deluge, sometimes known as Big Data, promises to provide us the opportunity to turn information overload into an asset for better decision making by applying analytics. That insight can help identify business trends and consumer preferences. Organizations can find new business streams, create more sustainable buildings and cities, pinpoint cures for diseases, or reduce criminal activity.

The challenge is storing, retrieving and prioritizing unprecedented volumes of data. Doing it the old way – throwing more resources at it — just won’t work. That’s inefficient and cost prohibitive. In 2009, the world spent nearly $4 trillion on hardware, software, services, networks and IT staff to manage data in the digital universe, according to IDC.

Take a look at storage. IDC states nearly 75% of the data that exists today is a copy. Organizations are spending far too much of their precious IT budget just to keep unneeded copies.

Beyond budget, people resources are also being wasted. It is estimated that employees spend up to two hours a day looking for the right information, such as searching for a forwarded file in email archives.

Instead, businesses need to capitalize on the potential hidden in the petabytes or even zettabytes of raw data. (For those wondering how big a zettabyte is, it is equal to 1 trillion gigabytes or 1,000 exabytes or about 250 billion DVDs.) Through intelligent storage and data retrieval systems, we can learn more with the information we have today to improve service to customers or open new revenue streams by leveraging data in new ways.

FOX Broadcasting and how they dealt with high definition television is a good example of this.

FOX had dramatic increases in storage demands due to HDTV, but through a first-of-its-kind, direct-to-digital storage solution for HD video, FOX eliminated the need for costly videotape recorders and media. The solution not only saved considerable amounts of money and physical space, it also offered a much more efficient way to handle video.

Here’s where smarter Big Data storage opened up new opportunities. FOX took archived HD content and made it available on demand – making them one of the industry leaders in the HD industry by taking existing content and finding a new way to offer it to customers.

Take a completely different example in healthcare. The Institute University of Leipzig, in Germany has a major genetic study called LIFE to examine disease in populations. LIFE is cataloging genetic profiles of several thousand patients to pinpoint gene mutations and specific proteins. This process alone generates multiple terabytes of data. With a storage system that intelligently organizes, archive and retrieves all this data, the project group was able to conduct analysis in half the time compared to its previous system.

As storage capacity and data recovery systems continue to advance – whether it leverages the cloud, virtualization or traditional hardware and software – storing, archiving and retrieving only the relevant pieces of data presents a huge opportunity for businesses to maximize information assets.

And that is just the tip of the iceberg. As the volume of data continues to grow, and the technologies used to manage that data advance, the quality of predictions improves dramatically. Adding in the data that is being created by billions of new mobile devices and sensors, what becomes computable is outright amazing.

Source:http://blogs.forbes.com/ciocentral/?p=2516

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