Computerworld
Bad data the source of costly storage management problems
Drain on data centre budgets
Sandra Rossi  16 November, 2006 14:47

The average installed storage capacity at Fortune 1,000 corporations has grown from 198 terabytes to 680TB in less than two years, according to a new report from research firm TheInfoPro (TIP).

This is a growth rate of more than 340 per cent as capacity continues to double every 10 months.

If this isn't a management concern, then it should be, David Thompson, managing director of archiving company, AXS-One Australia said yesterday.

While consolidation and virtualization strategies rank highly in these companies, Thompson believes the focus should be on bad data.

He said TIP reserach shows storage takes up more than 15 per cent of the total data centre budget at nearly half of all Fortune 1,000 companies.

"The problem is that consolidation solutions are hardware-focused, relying on better density and smaller footprints to achieve savings," Thompson said.

"They're band-aids; they deal with the symptom, more than the problem.

"The problem is not too litlle hardware. It's too much bad data."

Thompson said a closer analysis of what's really happening in the growing mountain of bits and bytes will uncover lots of duplicate copies, outdated records and non-business related files.

"For some companies, the redundant data amounts to more than half of what's stored," he added.

In a recent case, Thompson said a company bought 78TB of space but ran out in just six months.

A detailed look at the stored data led to a clean-up operation.

"The company found that not only did it not need a second storage rack but it was only using half of the first one," he said.

"At another company, a redundancy-minded database administrator had 38 copies of an Oracle database; now that's caution."

Such examples, Thompson said, demonstrates a lack of decision-making implementing policies on storage.

Doing it right, he said, not only saves money but ensures compliance and mitigates legal liabilities.

Asia Pacific VP of storage at research firm IDC Graham Penn said storage use has increased exponentially in Australia and many organizations go for a quick fix.

Penn said the attitude is "we are running out of storage, let's go get some more hardware."

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