Cognitive Computing Explained released!
In the first of our IT21 Emerging Technology series, Tom Petrocelli will release a casino online paper on what Cognitive Computing is all about, and the impact it will have on Information Technology in the 21st Century.Defining Software-Defined Storage Version 2 (Dated 1/6/2014)
Ever since the 1990s, when the technology vendors recognized that the financial markets valued software higher than hardware, the IT vendors have been on a quest to defined themselves as software companies.
To that end, vendors evolved their storage systems to being more software heavy. In fact, Neuralytix believes that all contemporary storage systems are software-based. But the term software-based does not, in any way define a storage system as being software-defined.
By 2010, this frenzy reached a blatant and overt peak, when vendors started to identify their solutions as being “software-defined”. These monikers started with Software-Defined Networking (SDN), and quickly followed with the Software-Defined Data Center (SDDC). Before long, the storage industry joined in and introduced the Software-Defined Storage (SDS) nomenclature.
In this Neurapective™, Neuralytix will look at leading storage systems vendors and the impact of the Software-Defined Storage (SDS) moniker. We will proffer a singular definition of SDS, and provide an analysis of its implications and ramification on the storage systems industry.
We are singling out the storage systems market since the greatest variations in definitions and approaches are present in this space. We do not disregard that companies including Symantec, RedHat (through its Gluster acquisition), and various open-source movements such as Open Stack, have already made significant in-roads in creating a software-defined storage abstraction layer.
Defining Software-Defined Storage
Ever since the 1990s, when the technology vendors recognized that the financial markets valued software higher than hardware, the IT vendors have been on a quest to defined themselves as software companies.
To that end, vendors evolved their storage systems to being more software heavy. In fact, Neuralytix believes that all contemporary storage systems are software-based. But the term software-based does not, in any way define a storage system as being software-defined.
By 2010, this frenzy reached a blatant and overt peak, when vendors started to identify their solutions as being “software-defined”. These monikers started with Software-Defined Networking (SDN), and quickly followed with the Software-Defined Data Center (SDDC). Before long, the storage industry joined in and introduced the Software-Defined Storage (SDS) nomenclature.
In this Neurapective™, Neuralytix will look at leading storage systems vendors and the impact of the Software-Defined Storage (SDS) moniker. We will proffer a singular definition of SDS, and provide an analysis of its implications and ramification on the storage systems industry.
We are singling out the storage systems market since the greatest variations in definitions and approaches are present in this space. We do not disregard that companies including Symantec, RedHat (through its Gluster acquisition), and various open-source movements such as Open Stack, have already made significant in-roads in creating a software-defined storage abstraction layer.