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News Seagate announces Ethernet-enabled storage platform

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Gareth Halfacree, 28 Oct 2013.

  1. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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  2. GiantKiwi

    GiantKiwi What's a Dremel?

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    They may want to change the name fairly pronto, the Kinect bit may cause them issues with MSFT.
     
  3. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    Kinetic is a word (meaning relating to, or resulting from, motion); Kinect is gibberish invented by Microsoft. One of these predates the other. Seagate will have no trouble with its product name. Well, unless its customers decide to complain about the fact that the SSD version is not relating to, or resulting from, motion...
     
  4. GiantKiwi

    GiantKiwi What's a Dremel?

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    My bad, Read it wrong.
     
  5. jb0

    jb0 Minimodder

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    As Wikipedia would say... "Kinect is a portmanteau of kinetic and connect[citation needed]"
     
  6. schmidtbag

    schmidtbag What's a Dremel?

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    Definitely an interesting idea, but considering how cheap, cool, and powerful CPUs are getting, I think this is several years too late. Also, unless I'm not understanding something correctly, I feel like this would cause some serious overhead when it comes to redundancy.

    Also, while I completely understand the reason to avoid the "middle section" of networking drives, wouldn't a NAS still be faster and more efficient when it comes to clusters of drives? So for example, wouldn't a NAS (using 1 ethernet port) with 6 drives give better performance than 6 drives each on their own ethernet port? Again, maybe I'm not understanding something correctly, I just think this idea is really only good for small amounts of very temporary storage.
     
  7. bowman

    bowman Minimodder

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    So you're going to take away my dumb disks which I put into servers running an open source operating system and next generation file system like ZFS, where redundant software-based arrays and checksuming keep my data safe - and instead put a proprietary firmware server on every single hard drive, with no redundancy to speak of.

    No thanks, Seagate. No thank you.
     
  8. Corky42

    Corky42 Where's walle?

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    Tell the customer to run around the room while holding it, problems solved :D
     
  9. play_boy_2000

    play_boy_2000 ^It was funny when I was 12

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    Finnaly a possible end to crap NAS boxes that barly manage to saturate a 100mbit link.
     
  10. TreeDude

    TreeDude What's a Dremel?

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    This certainly seems to be the way new storage is going. Software driven RAID sets at the data level instead of the hardware level. VMware and MS are already doing it in their hypervisors.
     
  11. Gradius

    Gradius IT Consultant

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    Took them over 10 years to do this. Btw, NAS is only slow if you buy those proprietary toy stuff. If you build one yourself, it can go beyond 1Gbps/s easily.
     
  12. SchizoFrog

    SchizoFrog What's a Dremel?

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    There are already several companies that use the word 'Kinetic' in their name along with Seiko's trademark for its automatic quartz technology as mentioned here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetic

    In all honesty though, I don't an issue arising any time soon.
     
  13. tuk

    tuk Don't Tase Me, Bro!

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    It's an interesting idea, but what happens when the hardware holding the 'Software driven RAID set' fails?
     
  14. kHAn_au

    kHAn_au What's a Dremel?

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    The key point of the proposed technology is that this is not block storage as we surrently expect. It's a "Key Value Store" which more closely related to CAS (Content Addressed Storage) than even NAS. The type of scale out applications they are thinking of with this technology are in the space where FalconStore, BlueArc, HNAS, EMC Centerra etc occupy.
    I'd hesitate to liken it to block accessible scale out storage like EMC Isilon, Data Domain or even HP StoreVirtual and Dell EqualLogic simply because its strictly non-block.
    It's more likely this type of drive would be used behind an application server which forms a Reduntant Array of Inexpensive Nodes (RAIN) in the same way EMC Centerra does with its pizza-box servers.
    I don't see much traction for them in the enterprise any time soon but I could be surprised like with ATA over Ethernet which has managed to persist for several years so far.
     
  15. kHAn_au

    kHAn_au What's a Dremel?

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    Yo monitor the hardware and software for faults. Build in 'hot-spares' and automatic recovery features; just like in any other enterprise storage platform.
    I wouldn't let my company invest in something that was missing these types of feature unless there was a very specific usecase.
     

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