Sun's Open Storage roadmap revealed
Giving away "open" storage is not good business #
Posted Friday 27th November 2009 02:21 GMT
Ask Sun the percentage of systems they have sold vs. given away.
A number over 10% is a sign of early adopter
A number over 50% is desperation
A number over 75% is a going out of business strategy....but also reality.
So Glad I am out of that nut house.
Too bad for Sun #
Posted Friday 27th November 2009 02:27 GMT
too bad will be out of business because the EU idiots will dither on about the sale to Oracle
Facts #
Posted Friday 27th November 2009 15:29 GMT
All of the S7000 products use SAS drives. The 2TB drives are SAS based 3.5" drives, so the anago has a total max capacity of 1.536 PB. The 33% increase is in flash read size. They used to use 18gb flash read drives - it looks like they're moving to their flash on chip solution for the next range of products which I believe is 24gb in size.
@AC (giving away) #
Posted Saturday 28th November 2009 22:00 GMT
To be fair to Sun, from what I can tell and what I've seen, the vast majority are fully paid for.
There were some early seeds but the majority of customers have followed those up with additional purchases.
It's a bit clutching at straws to say they've given away 48PB of storage (which is the current shipped number)
RE: Too bad for Sun #
Posted Sunday 29th November 2009 03:29 GMT
I think you'll find what's killing Sun was in effect long before they even had a storage division.
Get this to market.. ASAP #
Posted Sunday 29th November 2009 03:34 GMT
I don't think my company can sustain the alarming rate that IBM DS8000's are turning disks into popcorn.
Then again, until it says IBM on the front, they still won't buy them.
Get them certified with RAC, and theres a winner against the DS8000/SVC combo which *simply* doesn't work for RAC due to its horrific latency, not to mention the amount of writes still in the air at any given time.
The original reporter got it wrong #
Posted Tuesday 1st December 2009 00:59 GMT
The original reporter reversed their read flash and write flash #s. This means that the Anago has the same 6 x 100GB read flash cards, but that they are making a major upgrade to 96 x 24GB write flash cards in the JBOD (original was max 8 x 18GB). So, nothing new over the 7410, but the JBOD will be a major improvement in write performance.
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