IBM’s latest all-flash storage array is all about software and hybrid cloud, according to the vendor. “This is not just a traditional storage box,” said Eric Herzog, vice president of product ...
IBM is staffed with some geeks with big aspirations for sure. The gang at IBM has whipped up a little storage array for an unnamed customer that will use it for some unnamed task. The storage array ...
As IBM accelerates its sixth-generation X Series servers with memory-channel flash storage, it’s also offering to boost data-center performance with a new all-flash SAN array. The company announced ...
Experts advocate that a proactive approach to data resilience requires identifying threats at the first possible opportunity before they have a chance to infiltrate a system and wreak havoc. Recently, ...
In recent articles we have looked at the extent of cloud storage products and services available. These have included the file, block and object storage available from the main cloud providers, and ...
IBM's DS 8000 storage arrays make use of the same Power 5 processors used in IBM iSeries and pSeries machines. In the future, IBM said it hopes to partition a subset of those processors to run DB2 on ...
IBM today announced its latest all-flash array, the V840 virtualized storage system with 1.6 Petabyte compressed storage capacity (320 TB total usable un-compressed flash capacity) in a single 6U ...
IBM has unveiled a new addition to its DS800 storage array line, claiming better energy efficiency and a performance gain of around 150 per cent. The IBM System Storage DS8700 includes dual IBM POWER6 ...
There are very few architectures in the computing world like a mainframe. It delivers obscenely high levels of performance while simultaneously scaling towards the upper reaches of what you’d believe ...
IBM Research has just set a world record in data storage by building a drive array capable of holding 120 petabytes. It was done at the request of an unnamed research group that needs this ...
Everyone know what a petabyte is? No, not a petting zoo for ancient computer chips, or copies of the once influential 1980s computer mag. We’re talking about one quadrillion bytes, or 1,000 terabytes.
IBM this week announced a network-attached storage array, aimed at medium and large enterprises, that is capable of scaling to more than 14 petabytes under a single name space. The Scale Out Network ...