Cost-cutting, greater efficiencies to be topics at SNW
- 14 October, 2008 10:15
As the Storage Networking World conference opens in Dallas, it's likely that the recent stock market and financial sector upheavals will have attendees even more interested in cost savings and increased efficiencies.
With that in mind, one of the speakers is Madge Meyer, an executive vice president at financial services company State Street, who will officially open the conference Tuesday with a presentation on "IT Transformation & Optimization as a Competitive Advantage."
On Wednesday, Burzin Engineer, vice president of infrastructure technology at online comparison shopping service Shopzilla, will present a keynote on "How Increasing Data Mobility Can Reduce the Costs of File Storage." Also Wednesday, Marty Smith, CIO at information privacy company ChoicePoint, will speak on "Optimizing the Data Center to Increase Performance and Generate Cost-Savings for Business Unit Customers."
Throughout the conference, which runs through Thursday at the Gaylord Texan Resort Hotel and Convention Center, IT vendors will be announcing dozens of new products and services. Computerworld sponsors SNW with the Storage Networking Industry Association.
HP to offer data security products
Hewlett-Packard will announce new disk encryption and key management features for its tape libraries to help medium-size and large enterprises to enhance their data security and to simplify their data management, said Carlos Martinez, HP's senior product manager for storage security.
Many of the new requirements are coming from stricter forced disclosure laws that are mandating improved data protection to guard individuals' personal information, he said. "These forced disclosure laws are going to increase and will drive demand for storage security," Martinez said. HP's new enhanced systems are able to add that security without the performance hit systems get with software encryption, he said.
HP has added an option for users -- new hardware encryption for its HP StorageWorks XP24000 and XP20000 disk arrays. The enhancements can reduce the risk of breaches by protecting the data stored on each disk drive in the array, even if they are removed for transport or are stolen.
The hardware encryption feature wasn't previously available from HP but is being offered because of market demand, Martinez said. "The forced disclosure regulations and the hacking that's going on is bringing this to light," he said. "People were willing to risk a breach before, but now it's getting so much exposure that customers are asking for this. They're starting to ask for air cover."
For customers that want to add this optional capability to new or existing XP disk arrays, the extra cost is about US$23,000.
Also, HP is unveiling its enhanced Secure Key Manager (SKM) rack-mounted hardware appliance that automates encryption key management for HP LTO-4 enterprise tape libraries.
This new version of SKM (1.1) helps users track up to 2 million keys, making it easier to securely store and then find the keys when they are needed to unlock data on a long-ago stored tape, disk or other backup medium.
The Secure Key Manager 1.1 will be available in December for US$28,500, HP said.
"Keys for an online Amazon.com transaction may live for a few seconds and then disappear, but stored data keys live a long time," Martinez said. The problem eventually becomes one of administering them and being able to find them again quickly.
"If you don't have a good management system, you can't unlock it right away" when someone needs it, he said. "If you lose the keys, you are in big trouble. You want to mitigate risk but also keep that information accessible to those who have permission to see it."
As part of the announcement, HP is also cutting the cost of the SKMs, to us$57,000 for a redundant pair, from the previous price of $100,000.
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IBM to show new storage systems
IBM wouldn't divulge details in advance about several new products that it plans to announce, but said it would display some of its recently launched products, including the IBM XIV Storage System with its grid-based architecture for Web 2.0, financial services and traditional applications.
IBM will also demonstrate its IBM System Storage TS7650G, which offers in-line data de-duplication technology. Both products came to the company through acquisitions made earlier this year.
3Par, Symantec announce partnership
3Par and Symantec will announce a development partnership to integrate 3Par thin-provisioning technology with Veritas Storage Foundation to provide automated, nondisruptive space reclamation within 3Par storage arrays.
The project will help vendors create a granular, intelligent and automated mechanism for reclaiming unused storage capacity based on the sharing of intelligence gathered at the file system level, according to the companies.
Ocarina offers file-aware optimization
Ocarina Networks is debuting its Ocarina ECOsphere partner program that is aimed at helping storage manufacturers dramatically expand the storage capacity of their primary storage products using Octarina's file-aware optimization product.
The Ocarina Optimizer and Reader work together to help in file-size reduction. The Ocarina Optimizer reads files and applies content-aware subfile de-duplication and content-aware compression to each file, dramatically reducing their stored sizes, while the Ocarina Reader restores files to their bit-for-bit original state in real time when a file is accessed, according to the San Jose-based company.
Other product announcements include the following:
Open-E will unveil major enhancements to its Open-E Data Storage Server, including automatic fail-over for high-availability clusters; Write Once Read Many (WORM) support for digital archiving and Network Data Management Protocol support for universal backup and improved data security. Also included is increased fault tolerance and improved availability of all data, according to the Stoneham, Mass.-based vendor.
LSI will debut its Engenio 7900 modular storage system, aimed at midrange customers, as well as the latest release of its LSI StoreAge SVM (Storage Virtualization Manager) software suite, which helps users administer centralized storage management and multilevel data protection.
The Engenio 7900 system supports advanced replication and management services and is based on the Milpitas, Calif.-based vendor's seventh-generation XBB2 architecture, which delivers sustained disk reads of 6.4GB per second, a 400% performance improvement over the previous generation.
The upgraded software suite also provides users with thin-provisioning and storage pooling capabilities to help simplify virtualized infrastructure management and increase storage capacity utilization, the company said.
One new feature called "My SVM" will allow storage administrators to create secure user domains, allocate capacity and define specific functions that individual users will be allowed to perform, improving security and productivity.