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Friday | 5 December, 2008

Storage: Reviews

Reviews
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    Pimp my data center: SilverBack Migration Solutions 19/06/2008 08:53:39

    The strong-backed experts at SilverBack had us racked, cabled, and reconfigured in record time
    One of the most important vendors behind our project's success brought no hardware to the party at all. SilverBack Migrations Solutions, based in the US, is a datacenter build-out and migration consultancy staffed entirely by large-stomached ex-corporate IT and facilities geeks. You may recall that, in the main part of this story (see "Five lessons of a datacenter overhaul"), we lamented our inadequate planning and stretched-thin human resources. Both of these are common problems for a project of this scope, and they are exactly the issues that a company like SilverBack can go a long way to mitigate.
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    Pimp my data center: Universal Electric 19/06/2008 08:53:26

    Universal's Starline Track Busway has changed forever the way we bring power to our servers
    It's funny. Sometimes the products that have the greatest impact are the most difficult to write about because they simply work. That's the case with Universal Electric's Starline Track Busway, a straightforward solution that takes an impressive leap forward in the basic task of providing electrical power to the equipment in the server room.
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    Pimp my data center: Lantronix 19/06/2008 08:54:00

    The tiny SecureLinx Spider brings advanced IP KVM functions to our nooks and crannies
    It may have come in the smallest box, but Lantronix's SecureLinx Spider KVM had an impact on our project that was far greater than its physical size would suggest. The Spider is a "zero U" KVM, meaning it takes the form of a USB or PS/2 KVM dongle on one end and a dual-port Cat 5e plug on the other. The whole ensemble is light enough to hang off the back of a server, saving you the rack space normally eaten by IP KVM switches and such.
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    Price makes Imation SSDs a tough sell 19/06/2008 07:43:38

    Though resilient, dazzling performers, Imation's Pro 7000 solid-state drives can't compete with Western Digital's VelociRaptor SATA drive for overall value
    Solid-state drives (SSDs) have been around for many years. Their high cost, however, has limited their deployment to special environments, such as the military, where their rugged, shock-resilient design, coupled with extremely fast performance, justifies the expense.
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    Pimp my data center: OSI Security Devices 19/06/2008 08:53:46

    The OSI Omnilock card key system, programmable via Pocket PC, provides maximum security at minimal cost
    APC's NetBotz surveillance system can spot any hooligans invading our precious HIG 319 sanctum, but it can't keep them out. That's where OSI Security Devices' Omnilock 2000 comes in. This high-security physical access system met two key requirements for our specific situation.
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    Pimp my data center: Rackwise DCM 19/06/2008 08:53:53

    The Rackwise Data Center Manager provides an all-seeing, planner's-eye view of your datacenter
    Rackwise Data Center Manager (DCM), from Visual Network Design, arrived a little late to our HIG 319 build-out. Generally, a datacenter project would have made use of the Rackwise product from the very start of the planning process. But better late than never -- the DCM software arrived in the nick of time to help us with our sudden weight limitation issue.
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    Pimp my data center: American Power Conversion 19/06/2008 08:53:20

    APC laid the foundation and led the way with InfraStruXure racks, cooling, power management, environmental monitoring, and the software that ties it all together
    American Power Conversion (APC) played the central role among the vendors in the HIG 319 datacenter project. The company donated a boatload (literally) of APC InfraStruxure gear and no small measure of professional services expertise, but considering the pro bono nature of the project was understandably forced to cut corners, especially regarding the free expertise. We'd recommend engaging APC's professional services arm for a real-life, budgeted build-out. You'll get the same excellent equipment, backed by a full-on, start-to-finish project consultancy that has a few decades of experience managing datacenter infrastructure projects.
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    How StuffIt stacks up against WinZip 16/06/2008 07:36:27

    WinZip is zippier, but StuffIt overall has slightly better compression
    If you want to squeeze the greatest amount of data onto your hard drive, compression is the way to go -- and the ZIP format has long been a trusted method that nearly any Windows user can invoke. SmithMicro's StuffIt Deluxe 12 is a file-compression utility on steroids: it can archive and compress files of all types (to the Stuffit format and even to ZIP itself). The real question is: How well does it hold up against a well-known and popular application such as WinZip?
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    Infortrend EonStor B12S delivers big with small-form-factor drives 06/05/2008 11:08:34

    Built around 2.5-inch drives, EonStor B12S storage array yields space and energy savings without skimping on performance and features
    For years now, 3.5 inches has been the reigning size of disk drives for enterprise storage arrays. Now, however, smaller, more efficient 2.5-inch SFF (small form factor) drives are proving viable challengers to their larger brethren.
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    Database administration simplification 13/03/2007 15:17:48

    GridApp's Clarity 3.5 assists with the deployments of application and database scenarios
    As organizations grow, their application and database scenarios can become more complex, and it becomes increasingly important for IT to standardize the deployments of these environments. Standardization not only reduces mistakes by ensuring that each deployment is done exactly the same way, but it decreases deployment time. Fortunately, solutions are available to assist with the process, such as GridApp's database automation management solution, Clarity 3.5, aimed at companies running Oracle, Oracle RAC (Real Application Clusters), and to a lesser degree, SQL Server.
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    LeftHand boosts its SAN/iQ 27/02/2007 16:37:26

    SAN/iQ breaks all the rules, but includes all the tools to easily build a reliable and fast clustered platform
    Many companies would embrace the superior performance and enhanced reliability of clustered storage were it not for the fear that adoption would cost a fortune and lock them into proprietary hardware.
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