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Featured Stories
StorPool: Truly Distributed Storage

A lot of vendors claim to have distributed storage. Certainly many of them will sell a solution marketed as distributed. The issue is that a lot of what is marketed as distributed relies on legacy implementation. These were made with the standard storage needs in mind. Capacity, reliability, and speed arenโt hard to find these days. You know what is really hard to do? True distributed storage. Thatโs where StorPool comes in.
Transform and Scale Out with Isilon
Dell EMC first caught us up on the Isilon product history. The product growth has really taken off since 2010, when EMC purchased Isilon, and even further after the Dell merger. To illustrate, Isilon currently has 8,000 customers, 1,500 of which were new for 2015. They really want to expand the product from itโs media streaming roots. It seems like theyโve been successful so far in this. Their biggest growth is coming in new verticals like healthcare, financial services and genomics.
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More Articles of Interest
ioFabric wants to manage all your storage
Matt from Matt That IT Guyย wrote an interesting piece about ioStorage’s product: Vicinity:
Trevor Pott recently introduced me to some of the fine folks atย IOFabricย and suggested that I have chat with them. Going into the call, I didnโt know a heck of a lot about their flagship product, Vicinity. I did a bit of research and gathered that Vicinity allows you to use existing storage and manage it via one interface. It turns out that is only part of the picture.
Storage Basics: When to use SAN v. NAS
J Metz from J Metz’s Blog starts his post by answering this question from Quora:
When should a administrator use a storage area network technology and when should he use a network area storage technology?
โNetwork Area Storageโ is not a commonly used term. The correct expansion of the NAS acronym is โNetwork Attached Storage,โ which might make the the comparing/constrasting make a little more sense.
The decision to use one versus the other is not necessarily an โall or nothingโ deal. Administrators almost always find use for both block storage (upon which SANs are based) and file storage (upon which NAS devices are based).
What is block storage, and what is file storage? Bear with me a moment and Iโll try to synthesize, at the risk of oversimplifying.
