NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER: MIKE KARP ON STORAGE IN THE ENTERPRISE
09/23/04
Today's focus:  Justifications for information lifecycle 
management

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Examining ILM and storage grids
* Links related to Storage in the Enterprise
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Justifications for information lifecycle 
management

By Mike Karp

In the next several newsletters we are going to discuss two 
technologies, both of which are likely to exert a profound 
influence on storage and storage management during the next few 
years.  First we will look at information lifecycle management; 
then, we will examine storage grids.

This time however, we will look at these concepts not as 
separate areas of technology research.  It is time to consider 
them as two important and interrelated parts of what may well be 
the enterprise IT system of the future.

First, some justification for ILM.

In a very real sense, the planets (or stars, if you have a more 
galactic point of view) are now in alignment when it comes to 
supporting ILM.  I mean by this that the following indicators 
show that the time is ripe for the values that ILM delivers:

Point one:  Pent-up demand.   Many large IT shops have been 
deferring major storage investment for several quarters now.  
The result is that many, rightly or wrongly, already see 
themselves as being pushed to their limits when it comes to 
providing for their upcoming capacity requirements. 

Point two: Budgets are getting bigger, but guarded spending will 
still be the order of the day.  IT investment, while apparently 
a bit looser this year, is still going to be closely watched and 
stringently monitored.  It is therefore reasonable to expect 
that storage investments will whenever possible try to extract 
maximum value, and that the concept of "good enough" will often 
replace "best in class" for hardware purchases.

Point three: "Good enough" hardware, when used appropriately, 
really is good enough for enterprise IT.  SATA drives have 
already achieved widespread acceptance on the floor of the 
enterprise IT shop in virtual tape libraries and for storing 
non-mission critical data.  (Some vendors are also trying to 
position a low-cost Fibre Channel drive - FATA - as a 
value-based alternative to the high priced Fibre Channel drives 
currently in use. FATA has yet to make an appearance ion the 
marketplace, however.)

Point four: The opportunity for flexible storage is about to 
emerge.  Serial-Attached SCSI (SAS) drives are interchangeable 
with SATA drives (in SAS cabinetry), and one can be swapped out 
for the other without restriction.  Soon, a single array will be 
able to provide two or more tiers of storage.

Point five: Moving data is not quite as painful as it once was.  
Data migration tools, while still apparently not widely used, 
are available from several vendors and allow some level of 
policy-driven automation to be applied to the process.  
Automated data movement between the various tiers of storage is 
the most crucial element for ILM.

Point six: For larger enterprises, storage grid technology now 
seems to be a lot closer than we thought.  These have the 
capability of providing real-time scalability in terms of both 
capacity and throughput.  If this ability to scale - all the 
automated provisioning capability that necessarily must 
accompany it - lives up to its promise, storage grids are likely 
to play a key role in IT, and in the largest enterprise shops 
may well provide the most efficient implementation of a site's 
top-tier storage. 

More on the role of grids next time.

RELATED EDITORIAL LINKS

Storage vendors ease resource mgmt.
Network World, 09/20/04
http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2004/092004netapp.html
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Mike Karp

Mike Karp is senior analyst with Enterprise Management 
Associates, focusing on storage, storage management and the 
methodology that brings these issues into the marketplace. He 
has spent more than 20 years in storage, systems management and 
telecommunications. Mike can be reached via e-mail 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Nokia 
NW Special Report: Preparing an Infrastructure for Mobile 
Applications. 

Mobility, properly done, increases productivity and decreases 
operating costs. So get up to date information about building a 
mobile infrastructure, dealing with security issues, the latest 
networking options, connectivity alternatives and operational 
support enhancements.  
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=81451
_______________________________________________________________
ARCHIVE LINKS

Archive of the Storage newsletter:  
http://www.nwfusion.com/newsletters/stor/index.html

Breaking storage news and analysis:
http://www.nwfusion.com/topics/storage.html
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