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November 12, 2007

Comments

Thanks for calling out the advantages of running drives at optimal speeds. Moving a modern drive close to its max throughput with a production workload isn't an easy task; this has been one of the spots a lot of VTL marketing has missed in the past.

With encryption now a native feature of the LTO4, is there any chance that the DataFort will begin to be relegated to key management with the data plane functionality (and control of drive functionality) becoming a "Decru personality license" on products such as the VTL?

What's really missing to deprecate-your-tape is network-enabled offsite archival. Everything I've seen available has been very small-scale and really only suited for sending a couple of tapes a week. Since the dot-com era managed storage ventures, the changes in regulatory requirements along with the prevalence of encryption would seem to open this up as a potential market with some industry standards.

(ObEnhancement: The NearStore VTL, of all the products in the space, really should be able to present itself as an NDMP server).

This is an interesting topic. I did a little bit research on similar thing before. I even found a start up was looking for video compression experts to work on storage data compression products. My first impression was that those guys did not know how to do it. Video compression is lossy compression, but storage data compression has to be lossless.

I also noticed that Netapp is working hard on database and VM markets. Comparing to database and VM markets, which one do you think has greater potential? (I guess the answer will be: all of them have great potential).

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