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To: J Fieb who wrote (28083)11/15/2000 11:29:51 AM
From: Nine_USA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29386
 
November 15, 2000 11:12 INRANGE Smashes SAN Distance Limitation With New
Technology in FC/9000 Fibre Channel Director

Any-to-Any 100 Kilometer Distance Capability for Enterprise SANs Now Supported

MOUNT LAUREL, N.J., Nov. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Today's enterprise storage area networks (SANs) must
provide instant, global access to data distributed across multiple sites and over significant distances.
Traditionally, 10 kilometers has been the distance limitation between devices in a SAN. To overcome this
limitation, INRANGE Technologies (Nasdaq: INRG), a leading developer of scalable infrastructure solutions
for SANs, announced today that its enterprise-class IN-VSN(TM) FC/9000 Fibre Channel Director has been
upgraded with new technology (XCAF) to allow any port in a SAN to communicate over 100 kilometers,
without performance degradation.

INRANGE is demonstrating its "virtual SAN" capabilities at the Comdex/Fall Conference (November 13-17,
Las Vegas), exhibiting as part of the Fibre Channel Industry Association's pavilion. The 64-port FC/9000 is
currently the highest capacity fibre channel director available. With this announcement, each of its 64 ports
can support SAN devices over 100-kilometer distances while maintaining full utilization of bandwidth. In
addition, the company has issued a Statement of Direction that will increase the maximum capacity of the
FC/9000 to 128 ports. With that upgrade, all 128 ports would also have the extended distance capability.

Carl Greiner, Vice President-Director of META Group, commented on the evolving role of director-class
platforms within storage networks. "Directors are becoming backbones, and must have mega-bandwidth
capability between SANs, across the extended campus or MAN," said Greiner. "Until now, users have been
limited to only a few ports that could go long distances without severe performance drop-off. XCAF in
conjunction with the FC/9000 allows any-to-any port configurations between directors and more effectively
addresses the bandwidth issues."

"Since every port on the FC/9000 can simultaneously support 100 kilometers, users will no longer be forced
to make tradeoffs such as limiting the number of extended ports," said INRANGE Executive Vice President
of Marketing Charles Foley. "This is key for the emerging backbone model of SANs, and makes the
FC/9000 the logical choice for today's SSP and ASP metro model connecting remote devices into a
single-managed SAN."

With the explosive growth in SANs, a key imperative is to implement solutions that work not only today, but
also in coming years. Business dynamics and today's growth in enterprises indicate that users and systems
will not always remain in the same location within the campus/metro environment. "Our new
distance-shattering technology will make the most efficient use of SANs as businesses grow," said Foley.

"One of today's greatest SAN challenges is managing the connectivity and growth of geographically
distributed SANs," said Robin Purohit, senior director of product management for SAN, Clustering and
Replication, VERITAS Software. "Technologies like INRANGE's new FC/9000 provides the connectivity for
IT professionals to increase global data availability and enhance system performance."

The XCAF 100-kilometer technology for the FC/9000 is scheduled for December, 2000 availability. It will
be available through the company's direct sales force, as well as through its alternate channels of resellers
and OEMs.



To: J Fieb who wrote (28083)11/15/2000 4:13:31 PM
From: Smart_Asset  Respond to of 29386
 
SAN's have arrived,

JFeib, Nice to have Qlogics Skip Jones as a spokesperson for the entire fibre channel industry. Bring on the 127 gbps full fabric 2056 port superdirectors (1 switch per continent).

idg.net

BREAKING NEWS


The SAN is rising, say 70 companies at Comdex
by Agam Shah, IDG News Service\Boston Bureau
November 14, 2000, 16:18



LAS VEGAS - Four years ago at Comdex, vendors offering SAN (storage area network) hardware, software and services had a muted presence, with four companies exhibiting ten products on the show floor. This year, more than 70 companies were exhibiting over 300 SAN products and services, demonstrating the massive growth storage area networking has witnessed in the last few years.

A SAN is a network or subnetwork that interconnects different kinds of data storage devices with a data server.

"Four years ago we were evangelizing SAN technology. Today it has become a profitable and financially viable market," said Skip Jones, chairman of the Fibre Channel Industry Association (FCIA) in a speech on the Comdex floor. "It took five years of market maturation, but it was worth the wait," he said, adding that SANs have finally arrived as an industry.

And as the demand for data grows, be it via wireless services or the Internet, the demand for effective data storage and SANs will keep growing, according to Jones. "At a time when storage is exploding, IT managers are asking questions like 'How do I store and manage tons and tons of data?' SANs solve data storage and dissemination problems," Jones said, stressing the Internet and its worldwide presence played a major role in the emergence of SANs.

Servers on a storage area network communicate using different technologies, but many vendors have adopted the new Fibre Channel technology, because it allows high-bandwidth, low-latency data transfer.

SAN using Fibre Channel is a perfect plug-and-play technology, according to Jones, as it is based on open standards that include IP (Internet Protocol) and FCP (Fibre Channel Protocol), which make it highly interoperable. "Fibre Channel does not compare to Ethernet -- it is not for desktops or low-end networks," he said.

It took time for the Fibre Channel technology to mature, Jones said. Though development of the Fibre Channel standards started alongside that of SCSI (small computer systems interface) standards, they took time to flower. And as standards development for Fibre Channels progressed, more companies joined in developing and furthering SAN technologies.

Today, servers on a Fibre Channel SAN can transfer data between servers at up to 2G bps (bits per second). In comparison, UltraSCSI, the latest incarnation of the SCSI specification, supports maximum data transfer rates of 160M bps.

The speed of data throughput over Fibre Channels is expected to reach 4.5G bps by 2002 and 127G bps by the end of 2010, said Jones.

The SAN industry -- worth just $5 million in 1998 -- is expected to be worth $3 billion by 2001, and $7 billion by 2004, Jones said. A big chunk of the SAN revenue will come from the sale of network hardware -- a segment that has accounted for just 25 percent of storage vendor EMC's SAN sales so far this year.


SANs beat LANs (local area networks) for storage applications because of their highly scalable architecture, said Jones. Firstly, he said Fibre Channel-based SANs can stretch across the planet, unlike a LAN, which is limited to a certain geographical area. Secondly, LANs can handle only a limited data load -- concentrating the processing and data load on the file server.

The highly scalable architecture of a SAN means processing, storage and dissemination of data can be dispersed over a series of servers, Steve Bishop, chief technology of WorldStor Inc., said in his presentation here on SAN implementation.

SANs deployed over large geographical areas can be broken up into RSNs (regional storage networks) -- storage network islands hosted on secure server hosting facilities, said Jones. RSNs are connected to one another by either a special network or the Internet.

SANs also allow "zoning", or breaking up storage by department, and allowing a certain group of users to access certain data, he said.

On a lighter note, Jones said SAN technology could potentially reduce problems for a company's Human Resources department. "SAN reduces the need to hire people to solve storage problems," he said, eliciting a giggle or two from the audience.

The Fibre Channel Industry Association, based in San Francisco, can be reached at fibrechannel.org.

For more news from Comdex, see IDG.net's Comdex channel



To: J Fieb who wrote (28083)2/13/2001 11:13:38 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29386
 
Dell has a new powervault....

Dell New Product Targets NAS Market
(02/12/01, 4:35 p.m. ET) TechWeb News
Dell Computer Corp. (stock: DELL) is expanding its push into storage with the release of its PowerVault 735N, a mid-range NAS system. The PowerVault 735N, geared to small to midsize businesses and departmental workgroups, can be managed anywhere from a standard browser and enables storage expansion on a network. The price starts at $9,999, It can supply up to 1.44 Tbytes of storage. Dell also introduced its PowerVault 701N, an upgrade of the 705N NAS that supplies 60 Gbytes of storage for $1,399.