misasia logo
New milestone with 250,000 customers. By Jared Heng
08 Aug 2008

SINGAPORE, 7 August 2008 – Storage and data management solutions provider NetApp is claiming a new record for the adoption rate of NetApp deduplication.

The company claims that implementations now number more than 10,000 systems, and more than 2,500 customers deploy NetApp’s end-to-end deduplication technology.

NetApp, claims that enterprises can now de-duplicate primary storage with the firm’s V-Series suite of storage virtualisation solutions, irrespective of their storage vendor.

Enterprises with EMC, Hitachi Data Systems, HP, or other storage systems can now deploy NetApp de-duplication technology, the company says, to reduce redundant copies of data on these systems.

End-to-end deduplication

According to NetApp, the end-to-end technology allows enterprises to benefit from de-duplication across all tiers of data, including primary, backup, and archival.

Enterprises struggling with data growth management and related issues are increasingly turning to de-duplication technology, which plays an important role in storage efficiency.

“Our V-Series customers will be able to better control their heterogeneous data growth, while reducing costs and simplifying data management,” says Brendon Howe, vice president and general manager, NAS and V-Series Business Units for NetApp. “It is apparent that our customers are rethinking their traditional approaches to data storage.”

“NetApp strongly believes that de-duplication is an integral feature of any storage system,” says Patrick Rogers, senior vice president of Solutions Marketing for NetApp. “That’s why all of our current FAS systems are available with de-duplication technology that serves primary and secondary workloads.”

The solutions provider says that all NetApp storage systems will include de-duplication technology by end-2008.

Comments

Be the first to comment.


Post your comment

  • Please use English to post and reply to comments
  • Please do not use offensive language in the form of racial or ethnic slurs, abuse or personal insults
  • We welcome opinion and debate geared towards finding solutions
  • Please keep comments relevant to the topic
  • All comments are moderated
** Mandatory Field

Name
    **

Email
    **

Country


Comments
Maximum characters allowed: 2000
Disclaimer: All the content posted in this category comes independently from readers of Fairfax Business Media (FBM) Asia publications, unless specified otherwise. Fairfax Business Media (FBM) is not responsible for the opinions of its readers and the content posted by them does not represent the views and opinions of FBM.

Feature

Zafar Anjum

Techlightenment

Are cell phones more dangerous than terrorists?

Is there a connection between cell phones, bees and global food security?
By Zafar Anjum | 17 Mar 2010

RSS Feeds

Add this section to your favourite feed reader.