Apple has shipped its latest 64-bit cluster file system for storage area networks
Called Xsan, the software is geared for video workflows as well as storage consolidation for business, government, education and high performance computing, Apple said.
Slated for a fall delivery when it was announced in April, the release can enable up to 64 video professionals with access to a single storage system, supporting several high-bandwidth video streams for simultaneous film editing, broadcast and motion graphics creation.
The software, which can be used in conjunction with the Cupertino, Calif., company’s Xserve RAID
Customer Bunim-Murray Productions uses Final Cut
and Xsan to help edit MTV’s “The Real World” and FOX’s “The Simple Life.”
Apple had intended the product for a December delivery but extended the
deadline to make sure the product met customer satisfaction, according to
Eric Zelenka, senior product line manager for the server and software
business at Apple.
Xsan should do well among users who have come to value Apple for its ability
to deliver digital media through the highly-regarded Mac OS X operating
system as the software provides high availability for continuous play.
File-level locking allows multiple systems to read and write to the same
volume, which is ideal for heavy workflows.
Zelenka said Apple is also attacking the market at an aggressive price
point, selling it for $999 per client and per server, which includes any
Macintosh computer directly connected to a fibre channel
Xsan has no capacity charge while most file systems from rivals such as IBM,
SGI, and Sun charge per capacity. This makes Xsan ideal for cost-conscious
businesses who have hefty storage requirements, but need to satisfy them at a reasonable price to mind the budget.
Apple is also introducing a new support program for Xsan, open seven days a
week, 24 hours a day, covering the entire system, including storage
hardware, software and Mac OS 10. Support is $799 per system.
In related news, Apple upgraded its Xserve G5 server to deliver dual 64-bit
2.3 GHz PowerPC G5 processors with over 35 gigaflops of processing power per
system. These are upgrades from the original Xserve, which was launched last
March with the 2.0 GHz PowerPC G5 processor. There is also up to 8GB of 400
MHz DDR memory.