The loss of business information can be disastrous for a company’s health and
success, so it is essential that every business has a backup or a disaster
recovery (DR) plan.
But with changing technologies entering the backup and DR arena all the time,
is there still room for the traditional tape?
At the beginning of the year analyst
Forrester
Research published The Forrester Wave: Enterprise Open Systems Virtual
Tape Libraries, Q1 2008 report, which highlighted how it is often assumed
that enterprises are moving more of their backups to disk because they are
simply frustrated with tape.
However, the report said: “The reality is that enterprises are not frustrated
with tape. Many of its inherent challenges have been addressed through more
intelligent automated tape library systems.
“They cannot back up all the critical corporate data they need to with tape
alone because there is more data to back up than ever before, there is less
planned downtime during which to complete backups and application owners want
more frequent backups and faster restores.”
Unavailable and unreliable
Mike Richards, managing director at online data backup and managed service
provider
Smartways,
said: “In a society where you cannot even buy cassette tapes any more as they
are unreliable and known for getting chewed up in machines why are businesses
still using tapes to back up their data?
“Automated online backup means there is no need to physically move the data
offsite, which the business is charged to have removed and to bring back.”
Mark Saville, channel developments director at Smartways, said: “Smartways’
service provides a repeated revenue stream for its partners which can
continually buy more storage when needed.
“Partners buy aggregated storage from us, which they can then distribute to
each customer. This means they do not have to keep coming to us for more space
all the time and they can close deals faster.”
Saville also said that the bigger the capacity of storage a partner orders,
the bigger discount they get.
Smartways partners have access to its TouchPoint Advanced Partner Portal
(APP), a web-based management system. This system provides partners with control
over their customers’ backups and data quotas.
The recently released second version of the system generates alerts through
email. It gives notification of daily quota use, completion and status of
backups to nominated representatives at both the partner and customer locations.
However, Dave Haslam, technical solutions director at
Hitachi
Data Systems (HDS), believes the tape market is still strong.
“There is an attachment with tape, which is why it will never die,” he said.
Haslam said Hitachi Maxell, a subsidiary of HDS, has bucked the trend by
announcing an increase in its annual tape sales.
Good investment
“It is selling more tapes than it has in a while and therefore is investing in
developments around tape,” Haslam explained.
“Switching to online backup means that the data does not have to be
physically moved. However, it
disregards the telecommunication charge it costs companies to virtually
transport the data. As with anything in IT, it is a trade-off.”
Haslam added: “Tape still has its place even though other technologies are
becoming more prevalent.”
Paul Hickingbotham, solutions manager at storage distributor
Hammer,
agreed: “The role of tape is changing and companies are increasingly looking to
take advantage of the newer disk-based technologies such as Virtual Tape
Libraries (VTL) and de-duplication.
“Tape being dead has to be one of the most commonly heard untruths in the
market. There are always claims that new technologies will eliminate tape from
the IT market and frankly this is not the case.”
Data protection vendor
Sepaton
recently announced sales of $1m (£533,000) through VAR QAssociates since
partnering with the firm in July.
QAssociates resells Sepaton’s S2100 ES2 virtual tape library (VTL), DeltaStor
data de-duplication software and other enterprise products.
Jon Mills, managing director EMEA at Sepaton, said: “Tapes will not go away
because there is always the need for retention. But 2008 is the year for
de-duplication.
“All the industry’s gorillas are investing in this technology. EMC partnered
with Quantum, IBM acquired Diligent Technologies and Sepaton has an OEM
agreement with HP.”
Haslam said that despite the level of marketing against tape, it still
refuses to leave the market.
“Tape will still be in the market in five years’ time; it is like a belt and
braces for the industry,” he said.
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