> > I think that Data ONTAP is, or was, a software product available to > > purchase, if you could get it to run on some other hardware. I think > that > > storevault as a company made their business by building sata systems, > > cheaper than the regular netapp products, and out-compete netapp at > their > > own game, in the SMB market. So netapp boughtout storevault. > > That is not my understanding. I'm curious if you have anything to > support that. I believe that netapp came out with storevault to try to > capture the SMB section of the market, as they tried to do with the > f87.
I can't remember why I ever thought that; but I do know for sure that storevault was a separate company competing against netapp, with lower cost ATA and SATA architectures as opposed to the FC that netapp used. And then netapp acquired them. So then I have to question, how could storevault possibly compete against netapp with data ontap, unless they were somehow able to distribute data ontap? My only logical conclusion is that netapp must have made data ontap available as a redistributable software product. Probably I'm wrong about something, but I don't know what. _______________________________________________ bblisa mailing list [email protected] http://www.bblisa.org/mailman/listinfo/bblisa
