You've always been ahead of your time!
On Wednesday, May 14, 2014 3:35:05 PM UTC-5, Steven S. Critchfield wrote:
In-line compression, yes, built into the backup app.
deduplication, yes, built into our filestorage.
- Original Message -
Your 2008 solution had in-line compression
On Tuesday, May 13, 2014 12:08:04 PM UTC-5, Kent Perrier wrote:
And have it replicated across data centers so that when a DC pukes on
itself (power outage, backhoe incident, act of God, Godzilla vs. Mothra)
its No Big Deal(TM) to business as usual.
I think the technology behind products
- Original Message -
On Tuesday, May 13, 2014 12:08:04 PM UTC-5, Kent Perrier wrote:
And have it replicated across data centers so that when a DC pukes
on itself (power outage, backhoe incident, act of God, Godzilla vs.
Mothra) its No Big Deal(TM) to business as usual.
I think
In-line compression, yes, built into the backup app.
deduplication, yes, built into our filestorage.
- Original Message -
Your 2008 solution had in-line compression and deduplication? Just
wondering.
Data Domain (the company and product) was founded in 2001 (
I too managed TSM systems for many years, and even with their Disaster
Management
function being implemented well, doing DR recovery with TSM is painful at
best,
but it can be done.
Makes me kind of glad I am out of the game. But it does make me wonder what
'really big' guys do for true DR
Coincidentally on this topic - I'm still undecided on my July presentation,
but I'm at OpenStack Summit right now and happen to be attending a lot of
tracks on storage (including DR).
If there is interest, I can present on what I'm picking up here. There are
some pretty slick solutions using both
Makes me kind of glad I am out of the game. But it does make me wonder
what
'really big' guys do for true DR Management. Google and Facebook and the
like
store files in triplicate and use bluray jukeboxes
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And have it replicated across data centers so that when a DC pukes on
itself (power outage, backhoe incident, act of God, Godzilla vs. Mothra)
its No Big Deal(TM) to business as usual.
I think the technology behind products like Data Domain is the way to go.
With RTOs decreasing you don't have
Sony claims a breakthrough:
http://www.itworld.com/storage/416783/sony-develops-tape-tech-could-lead-185-tb-cartridges
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Tape! Bleh!
On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 11:29 AM, Curt Lundgren verif...@gmail.com wrote:
Sony claims a breakthrough:
http://www.itworld.com/storage/416783/sony-develops-tape-tech-could-lead-185-tb-cartridges
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Its for recording what is going on in Washington.
I am going to loan them my demagnetizer.
Dave
On Fri, 2014-05-02 at 11:32 -0500, Chris McQuistion wrote:
Tape! Bleh!
On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 11:29 AM, Curt Lundgren verif...@gmail.com
wrote:
Sony claims a breakthrough:
Did I leave my punch cards at the last meeting?
On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 1:03 PM, Jack Coats j...@coats.org wrote:
Didn't see the size of the 'standard' for the cart they are going to use.
LTO-7? Naw, I think LTO was designed to end at 6, but that was a few years
ago when I was learning
On 05/02/2014 03:06 PM, Bill Woody wrote:
Did I leave my punch cards at the last meeting?
I'm sorry Bill. I believe I missed the announcement for the 150TB hard
disks.
So long as LTO cartridges were the same volume and more expensive than
comparable hard drives (RDX), tapes became the
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