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Technology Stocks : The New QLogic (ANCR)
QLGC 16.070.0%Aug 24 5:00 PM EST

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To: trendmastr who wrote (28273)1/18/2001 10:13:44 PM
From: Douglas Nordgren  Read Replies (1) of 29386
 
The Qlogic - Procom graft bears fruit, a high end NAS appliance.
This article appears in Newtwork World News, but it's not online.

High-capacity NAS device on tap from Procom
By Deni Connor
Network World, 01/15/01

IRVINE, CALIF. - Procom Technology is expected to launch a new high-end,
network-attached storage appliance this week that lets heterogeneous enterprise
customers share, consolidate and manage their storage resources.

The NetForce 3100HA is a scalable, high-availability NAS device with an initial
capacity of more than four terabytes that customers can grow as their storage
requirement increases. This can be done by inserting 36G- or 73G-byte drives
into the rack-mount enclosure without taking the system down. The system also
has fault-tolerant features such as redundant fans and RAID controllers. To
connect it to the network, the NAS appliance has a 10/100/1000M bit/sec
Ethernet adapter.

The NetForce is the entry-level model of Procom's storage family. In Windows NT
networks it makes use of access control lists (ACL) and NT's multiple master
domain architecture. ACLs are lists of users who are allowed to access the
server and the access rights they have; the multiple master domain architecture
is used in geographically separated midsized and large corporations to house the
security and access rights for users.

The NetForce supports the Unix Network File System and Microsoft's NFS, as
well as the Network Data Management Protocol, the newest standard for
LAN-free backup. It is designed to scale to over 16 terabytes.

The NetForce will compete against file servers from Network Appliance and EMC.
The Network Appliance 840 scales to over 4.5 terabytes. EMC's ip4700 has an
upper capacity of 3.6 terabytes.

But it was the new device's easy installation and cost that attracted Varco, an oil
and gas company in Houston.

"We put our [enterprise resource planning] system on a Network Appliance
server originally," says Cory Lucas, network administrator for Varco. "It took a
long time to install and was complex. We looked at a couple of alternatives, but
they didn't offer us the storage capacity we wanted. The 3100 was a 15-minute
install into our Windows NT environment at one-third the price of the Network
Appliance product." Lucas says.

The NetForce 3100HA NAS appliance is available starting at $42,000.

Procom: procom.com
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