Deep beneath a glitzy New York City product launch that included a couple of nonsensical, record-breaking stunts – 26 people cramming into a Mini Cooper and a daredevil motorcycle jumper flying over 40 side-by-side storage racks in Miami – EMC revealed one all-important fact:
The company has finally written new storage software that eventually will replace all the now-creaky code that was first written more than two decades ago.
A number of EMC customers have confided to eWEEK during the past few years that this change has been needed for a long, long time.
Whether EMC is or is not “the fastest”, of course, depends upon each IT system and workloads deployed. But the company has, in fact, increased the horsepower in its arrays with new, cooler-running multi-core processors and solid-state disk options, enhanced throughput, and added that new, leaner code that has been needed for so long.
“On the data protection side, ‘fast’ is still critical, because you are dealing with a fixed amount of time in your backup slot, which is a big issue because of data growth,” storage analyst Brian Babineau, vice president of research and analyst services at Enterprise Strategy Group, told eWEEK.
“You cannot change the fact that there’s 24 hours in a day, and you can’t change the fact that your information is growing rapidly. The only thing you can do is make your stuff faster so you can deal with those two problems.”
In summary, EMC introduced:
EMC president, CEO and chairman Joe Tucci told the live and Webcast audience at the company’s event that the company has come a long way during its generation-plus in business. Tucci reminded everyone that Symmetrix – which was introduced in 1990 – was EMC’s first-ever storage array, and that it held “a whopping” 24GB of data on 5.25-inch platters.
“Now, and this is the first time I’ve seen this, they’re actually measuring information in zettabytes,” Tucci said. “So you might ask, what’s a zettabyte look like? Everybody knows a terabyte, a trillion [bytes]; everybody knows a gigabyte – a billion [bytes]. A zettabyte is a billion trillion, or a trillion billion, depending upon how you want to look at it. But it’s a 1 with 21 zeroes after it. It’s a tremendous amount of information.”
EMC is approaching the new storage world from both ends: the high end, or “Big Data”, as it has for years, and, more recently from the small-to-medium-size business end – most specifically with the new line of storage devices the company introduced at the New York event.
Like Oracle, EMC is challenging IBM and Hewlett-Packard in the high-end storage market and HP, Dell, NetApp and many others on the midrange and SMB side.
Here are some quick facts on the new products. eWEEK will examine these in more detail in a separate article:
By the way, the Mini Cooper stunt, performed by a lot of small people in a Connecticut-based dance troupe called Pilobolus, was done on stage before the live audience in New York. A representative of the Guinness Book of World Records observed, sanctioning it as a legitimate world record for “Most Number of People to Get Inside a Mini Cooper and Stay There for at Least Five Seconds”, or some such.
The storage analogy was somewhat apparent: A lot of content can be crammed into a small space.
In a parallel event in Miami and shown on live video, daredevil motorcyclist Bubba Blackwell revved up his Harley-Davidson XR7, sped up a ramp, and vaulted over 40 EMC Symmetrix racks to a safe landing on a second ramp.
The storage analogy was lost on many observers.
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