Tape remains a fast-growth market that holds rich opportunities for
resellers, vendor
Overland
Storage has asserted.
The vendor has claimed companies are continuing to invest in tape because it is
reliable and removable.
Peri Grover, director of tape at Overland, said: “Tape being dead is one of the
biggest misconceptions of all time. The tape market is worth $1.4bn (£687m) and
the mid-market, in particular, is continuing to grow at a rapid rate.”
Chris James, marketing director at Overland, said: “Backup should be looked at
as a subject. If a customer wants to archive their photos, they do not want
something complicated. Tape may be boring, but it is cost-effective, can be
taken off-site and is guaranteed to work.”
Overland, which provides both tape and disk, launched a partner programme last
year (CRN, 16 January 2006) with 600 registered users. Twelve months
later, it has amassed 1,500 partners.
Grover added: “Overland continues to refresh its tape product lines. Other
vendors, such as IBM, also
continue to invest in tape. Vendors would not invest in technology if it were a
dying breed.”
Peter McNamara, tape sales manager at
IBM,
said: “A strong market is one of the reasons why IBM provides tape
demonstrations, showing how much information can be stored. In 2006 we had a
demonstration of to show storage of up to 8TBs, which should be available in the
next seven to eight years.”
Mike Lawrence, managing director at reseller
Bentpenny,
agreed: “There is still a huge demand for tape, especially in SMEs and
single-server companies.”
Steve Derbyshire, business development director at reseller
NEC
Philips Union Solutions, said: “Disk can hold more data, however, some firms
cannot afford the bandwidth.
“It is better to use disk daily and use tape backup once a week.” However, Claus
Egge, analyst at IDC, disagreed: “Tape is not showing as much growth as it used
to. It has had a new lease of life thanks to virtualisation, but it still is not
as popular as it used to be.”
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