h3.post-title { color:#000000; } h3.post-title a, h3.post-title a:visited { color:#7f0000; } h3.post-title a:hover { color:#00ffff; } .post-title a { color:#A52A2A; } .post-title { color:#A52A2A; } -->

Friday, 27 November 2015

5 storage technologies you hav to be thankful for


Why storage? Human civilization is in a transition from the analog and physical to the digital and intangible. But the basis of any civilization is the storage of its culture.
In the past that storage was in books and human memory, in statues and artwork, in musical compositions and the physical design of our built environment. Now, and even more so in the future, our culture relies on the storage of ones and zeros on media and with supporting software that will be lucky to exceed 1% of the life of a well-printed book.
This is the challenge of storage for a digital civilization. And that is why you hav to be thankful for the improvements that storage is achieving in the 21st century. Here's my top 5, in no particular order:
Data encryption. Because digital data is easy to copy and share, we need encryption to keep what is ours, ours alone. The American intelligence community doesn't like it, but if they didn't have a long history of ignoring legalities - like the Constitution - and then lying about it, maybe Americans would trust them more.
The thousand year disc. The M-disc uses a mineral layer to create an extremely tough and long-life DVD and, now, 25GB and 100GB Blu-ray discs. As far as we know this is the only digital media with a lifespan as good as a well produced book.
Scale-out object storage. Objects are files that can be easily accessed from multiple servers, making them ideal for access from hundreds or thousands of nodes. The fastest growing kind of storage for the last decade, it powers all the big cloud services.
Advanced archive storage. As we collect and store more information, archiving - not backup - becomes the critical success factor. Expect to see much innovation in archiving over the next decade as capacity needs skyrocket.
Solid-state storage. While disk drives aren't going away, solid-state storage has revolutionized mobile device and enterprise storage. SATA SSDs are transitional devices - much better options are arriving soon, and some are already here.

Now we have over 25TB of capacity, including around 2TB of flash. Hard drives can now be had for less than $25/TB, while USB 3.0 and Thunderbolt have dramatically improved data rates.
Source:ZDNet

No comments:

:a   :b   :c   :d   :e   :f   :g   :h   :i   :j   :k   :l   :m   :n   :o   :p   :q   :r   :s   :t Add emoticons to Blogger +

Post a Comment