IBM Still a Fan of Tape
Anyone who thinks corporate-compliance and record-retention regulations aren't wagging the dogs needs a reality check. In many cases, rules such as HIPAA and Sarbanes-Oxley are driving new standards and technologies for data encryption and archiving.
IBM today introduced tape storage drives based on the recently passed Linear Tape Open (LTO) Generation 4 standard, incorporating tape-encryption tools from its System Storage TS1120 tape drive.
The resulting integration allows the devices to compress and encrypt data with little or no impingement of the drive's performance.
This is a key accomplishment because customers demand the added safeguard of encryption -- which renders information unreadable by anyone but the key manager -- but who don't want the drive's ability to sock away or retrieve data impacted.
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Pulling for tape.
Source: IBM |
Despite rumors of its demise in favor of disk, tape storage is still a highly valued medium for backup, archiving and compliance, which is why LTO 4 drives are so highly anticipated by customers trying to temper the data explosion.
LTO 4 powers drives with greater performance and capacity than LTO Generation 3 could muster, said Craig Butler, business line executive for archive, IBM Systems Storage.
Specifically, IBM's new tape systems transfer data up to 240 megabytes per
second, or 50 percent faster than LTO 3, and boast cartridge capacity to 1.6
terabytes
Available in May, the new drives include the:
IBM's announcement comes a week after Dell trotted out its PowerVault
LTO-4-120 drives. Like IBM's new systems, Dell's LTO-4-120 features
encryption, 800GB native capacity and a 50 percent performance increase over
the previous generation.
Dell is shipping the drives today, with pricing for the external standalone
Dell PowerVault LTO-4-120 drive starting at about $4,000.
Sun Microsystems, HP and other systems vendors are expected to come to
market in the coming days or weeks.
IBM wasn't done with its storage news this week. In addition to the LTO 4
drives, Butler also said IBM completed the newest member to its virtual tape
library family.
The IBM Virtualization Engine for Open Systems TS7520, the follow up to the
TS7700 launched
last year, uses SATA
