Faced with the challenge of an explosion
of data from macro trends like social media, mobile, the Internet of
Things, and Big Data, many organisations are faced with snowballing
technology requirements and yet declining IT budgets that mean doing
more with less.
Storage is often the highest single line
item in these reduced or static IT budgets, making the strategy of
throwing more storage hardware at the data explosion problem less and
less acceptable. Many of today’s organisations, such as picturemaxx,
University of Sussex and the Institut of Laue Langevin have found a way
to step away from such a MESS (massively expensive storage systems)
solution and have discovered more scalable, flexible, available and cost
effective storage solutions – Software-Defined Storage (SDS) solutions.
Open Source SDS solutions can be deployed
in conjunction with industry standard hardware, avoiding the vendor
lock-in of expensive proprietary models. This gives organisations the
freedom to choose their hardware, ensuring they always get the right
hardware their requirements and with the right price. Democratising
infrastructure in this way delivers cost savings of up to 80%.
Software-Defined Storage will change everything
2014 is the year that SDS is shaking up
the market by delivering on its promise of a truly vendor agnostic
approach, and providing a single management view across the data
centre. Organisations are beginning to coalesce around a standard
definition of Software-Defined Storage, and clearing up the confusion
that arises from the proliferation of approaches taken by vendors
purporting to provide “Software-Defined” solutions.
Some vendors claim to offer SDS but are
merely providing virtualised storage, characterised by a separation and
pooling of capacity from storage hardware resources. Others claim to
have SDS solutions even though their solution is 100% reliant on a
specific kind of hardware. Neither definition fulfills the fundamental
SDS requirement of enabling enterprises to make storage hardware
purchasing decisions independent from concerns about over or
under-utilisation or interoperability of storage resources. It is
important to be aware of these subtle distinctions, otherwise the key
SDS benefits of increased flexibility, automated management and cost
efficiency simply won’t be realised.
True SDS solutions let organisations work
with any protocol stack to build specialised systems on industry
standard hardware, rather than limiting their choices to the expensive
specialised appliances sold by the ‘MESS’ vendors.
Storage-Defined Storage changes the economic game for the Storage-Defined Data Centre
SDS is one of the three legs of the stool
that make up the Software-Defined Data Centre (SDDC), along with the
server virtualisation and Software-Defined Networking (SDN). As the
most costly leg, however, SDS is also a target for mis-direction of
terms and capture of high margins. Many vendors claiming to deliver SDS
are selling hardware products with the 60% to 70% margin that has come
to define the enterprise storage market. SDS is about much more than new
technology innovation. True SDS lets customers do things they couldn’t
do before and, most critically, fundamentally changes the economics of
the enterprise storage business by increasing the hardware choices
available to end customers.
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