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Posts Tagged ‘tape’

Podcast – A Quick Guide to Data Classification with Storage Expert Ray Lucchesi

Posted by Gary Parker on May 12, 2010

Ray Lucchesi, President of Silverton Consulting


5 min 16 sec

In this Experts & Insights podcast,  Gary Parker, senior PMM at BakBone, talks to Storage Expert Ray Lucchesi of Silverton Consulting about data classification. Ray shares with us how to create a data classification strategy that safeguards your business based on the value of its data. This podcast also explores how to determine the value of data by evaluating the real Recovery Time Objectives (RTO) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPO); how to work with users to create classes of data such as Static, Business-Vital and Mission-Critical; and how to assign storage software and hardware systems based on the class of data to gain maximum use of resources.

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How Green is Green?

Posted by BakBone on October 7, 2009

Andrew Martin

Andrew Martin

A few months ago I was presenting at a conference in Kolkata aimed at stimulating adoption of IT in West Bengal. One of the other presenters at the event was the trade minister for the region and I was fascinated as he outlined the challenges and aspirations he saw ahead in West Bengal. However I was also struck by a comment he made about green computing. He mentioned that it was important to repurpose old IT equipment and recycle old computers from companies into the community.

I have no doubt that his intention is a good one. Taking computers discarded by businesses and placing them into the hands of community centres and schools is something that will deliver enormous benefit to large parts of the population that could not even begin to think about buying their own computers. However, is this green computing as the minister described?

The answer is “I don’t know” and the truth is, when you look into the issue of energy saving it is enormously complex.

On the surface, if you extend the life of a PC and keep it in use after the original owner has discarded it, that would seem to be a green practice, as manufacturing requirements for new PCs will be reduced. However, to really assess whether an IT-related policy is truly green, so much more needs to be considered than simply extending the life of a piece of equipment.

  • How much energy was consumed in the manufacturing process?
  • How much energy was consumed in the manufacturing of the components?
  • What is the ongoing energy consumption over time? (Older equipment typically consumes more energy just to run.)
  • How much energy will be consumed in the safe disposal of the product?

In short, to really understand if we are achieving green computing we need to consider the energy consumption over the entire lifetime of the product from manufacturing through to the final disposal process. For most of us this is an impossible task. It requires expert consultancy, a long-term vision with senior level commitment to that vision. Large, multi-national companies are taking this approach, but for the rest of us necessity demands that we take a more pragmatic approach.

The view that I have heard from many IT managers and directors is something akin to, “I believe in looking for efficiencies and cost savings and often if I can achieve these, the result is less power consumption and fewer wasted resources. If I can drive efficiency and save money, the spin off is that most likely I am being more green.”

On balance, I subscribe to this view. Efficiency is generally a good thing. When we utilise just enough resources to deliver the functionality that we need, then waste is trimmed, budgets are saved and over-consumption is eliminated.

When it comes to data protection, the practice is intrinsically “non-green.” Data protection involves creating duplicate copies of existing data. By it’s nature this process creates “waste” as it requires more storage hardware, dedicated storage networks, redundant systems, increased power consumption, and the list goes on.

However, all vendors in the data protection space are trying to drive efficiency, and in doing so, are finding ways to reduce excess resource utilisation. Examples of technology that aid the green cause, even if the reason for being is nothing to do with green issues, include: 

  • Tape – Tape is offline media. It does not consume power when stored in a vault. Perhaps it is the greenest of all media?
  • Data depulication – Compressing 30TB of data onto 5TB of disk is truly efficient. Less hardware required and reduced ongoing power consumption.
  • MAID – Intelligently powering down disks that are not in use saves money on datacenter cooling and on powering the disks themselves.
  • Virtualisation – converting physical servers or storage into virtual enables you to consume more resource from every piece of hardware you own.
  • Cloud-based backup – Sharing a single backup infrastructure between numerous companies and users.
  • Software enhancement – Things like “incremental forever” eliminate full backups, which in turn reduces media consumption.

Most of us believe the green cause in IT is a good one. Actually doing something about it can be complex and difficult. However, keeping up with the data protection technology curve is in itself a way to support a green agenda and save costs. When it comes to repurposing old PC’s in Kolkata, is that green? Possibly not. However, is it wrong? Well, that’s a moral dilemma and whole different debate!

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Disk vs. Tape – Do Your Homework

Posted by Gary Parker on August 31, 2009

Gary Parker

Gary Parker

There has never been a shortage of backup software vendors, but over the past few years there has been an explosion of companies whose products focus on backup to disk. With hard drive capacities growing and the cost of disk shrinking, backup to disk makes some sense; however, current software vendors manage backup media in very different ways, so you should examine this before purchasing. 

One area to understand is how the software handles offsite protection, where several “disk-only” products provide no automatic ability to vault or manage disk drives stored offsite. This leaves the customer with the painful, manual process of ejecting and tracking individual USB drives themselves. Many customers in that situation just end up not taking their data offsite at all and then the data is left vulnerable to total data loss if a catastrophe happens within the building.

Tape is still a low cost reliable medium that is a good fit for offsite protection. Also, it is important to examine which features different backup software supports and try it out for yourself. Most organizations are married to their backup software for awhile, so spend the time to really check it out.

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Is Tape Dead?

Posted by BakBone on July 9, 2009

Ravikumar Krishnan

Ravikumar Krishnan

It’s hard to imagine a world without tape. For years we have heard countless predictions about the impending demise of tape technologies for data storage and retrieval. On the other hand we also see quite an investment in tape technologies by all sorts of organizations for their archival and HSM projects.

Non-tape technologies, especially disk, will continue to make advances that make them very valuable to organizations where rapid data accessibility is the dominant storage. That segment of the market will continue to see growth in the future. However, for organizations where portability, lower cost, higher density and data protection are important storage needs, tape technology has a clear advantage. Despite the predictions of the contrary,  the market for tape storage products continues to grow as analyst firms project steady growth for tape drives and double digit growth in sales of high density tape automation products.

The future is exciting for both tape and non-tape technologies and we expect to see tremendous advancement as innovators to meet the storage needs of customers. BakBone provides multiple options for both tape and disk-based backup, most recently introducing our real-time disk-based solution, NetVault: FastRecover.

Posted in BakBone Asia | Tagged: , | Comments Off

 
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