Thursday, March 28, 2024

Iomega Drives on to Exile Tape

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Iomega is expanding its rack mount offerings with the StorCenter Pro NAS 200rL Linux Server, aimed at the small business and home office environment.

“It’s a solution for companies needing that next step in storage, and provides very good performance at a great price point,” Tom Kampfer, president and COO, told InternetNews.com.

The servers hold four SATA-II drives that can be configured for RAID or JBOD (define). The hot swappable drives can be removed without interruption, and built-in print server capability lets users share up to four USB printers.

Active Directory Services support allows domain user and group compatibility with Windows, and EMC Retrospect Express offers backup and disaster recovery protection.

It’s the newest additions to the NAS line since last September when Iomega introduced StorCenter Pro NAS 200r 1TB Server and the Pro NAS 150d 3TB Server.

“Small businesses are data-driven, and e-mail is a big driver. There is also more multimedia content, which is dense content, that has to be stored,” said Kampfer.

Client support includes Windows, Mac OS X 10.2.7 or higher and Linux distributions including Red Hat 9, Mandrake10, Debian 3.0 and Fedora Core 3.

The latest NAS offerings will hopefully bang another nail in the coffin for tape technology, says Iomega’s chief. “We think tape should die as there just isn’t any rational benefit,” Kampfer says, stating storage drive technologies are cheaper, faster and more secure.

“About 25 to 30 percent of our customers are replacing tape, which is great. Another 30 percent are getting rid of optical drives. Tape will continue to decline, it’s just that old habits die hard and change is sometimes difficult,” he said.

The death of tape won’t happen soon, Robert Amatruda, IDC research director for tape and removable storage, told InternetNews.com, though Iomega’s taking an aggressive approach, he says.

“Tape is growing and contracting in some areas and it’s definitely under pressure,” the analyst says. Some of that pressure, said the analyst, is tied to Iomega’s refresh of its REV product line that boosts capacity to 120GB.

Calling the REV platform, which debuted
in 2003, “a proven technology that delivers performance and ruggedness that no tape product can match,” Kampfer says the third generation provides higher capacity for the best price.

The REV 120GB Backup Drive features transfer rates of up to 35MB per second and an estimated 30-year archival life. It can hold 48,000 photos, 2,000 hours of music or 12 hours of HD video. Pricing information will be released closer to shipment starting in April, according to Iomega.

This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.

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