tlb
Volume 3, Number 42 -- November 7, 2006

IDC Says Virtual Tape Library Sales to Double in Five Years

Published: November 7, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The market researchers at IDC have polished up the crystal balls they have dedicated to the storage market, and last week predicted that sales of virtual tape libraries would double in the next five years, hitting $1.4 billion in sales by 2011.

Perhaps even more astounding than that revenue increase is the expectation that the amount of capacity under management by VTL solutions will increase at a compounded annual growth rate of 47.4 percent of that five year period. This is a huge increase in data, and it seems to indicate that companies that have loved tape archiving for decades will increasingly adopt VTL as a front end to their tapes because of the speed and flexibility it provides to backup and restores of data.

"The long-term outlook for the worldwide VTL system market calls for solid growth in market value and terabytes through 2011," explained Robert Amatruda, the research director for IDC's storage group who put together the most recent VTL report. "Although the opportunity looks bright for VTL adoption, suppliers must educate customers about the potential benefits and value proposition of VTL systems and not merely tout them solely as an alternative to tape-based data protection."

IDC is predicting that this year, open systems VTL products will eclipse the mainframe-based products, which are based on high-end mainframe disk arrays and virtualized implementations of mainframe-style hierarchical storage management programs. Amatruda says that open system VTL products are adopting high-capacity, low-cost SATA disk drives to push down the price of VTL archiving, and that VTL will be part of a tiered storage solution. This is presumably IDCspeak for saying that having a VTL as part of a disk array or SAN will not only be absolutely normal soon, but expected, because of the ever-decreasing backup windows that companies are facing. The backup window is essentially closed at many companies, and that means VTL has to stand between tape and servers.



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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Microsoft and Novell in Landmark Partnership

Bang for the Buck: Entry Linux Servers Keep Windows and Unix Honest

Liquid Computing Starts Shipping LiquidIQ Servers

The X Factor: Form Follows Function

But Wait, There's More:


Novell Appoints Presidents of North American, Asia/Pacific Regions . . . Supermicro to Go Public, and Rackable Systems Show Why . . . VMware, XenSource Push Out Beta Virtualization Products . . . IBM Creates Virtualization Dashboard, Merges Server and Storage Management . . . IDC Says Virtual Tape Library Sales to Double in Five Years . . . EMC Claims Thermal Dominance in High-End SANs . . .

The Linux Beacon

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Bang for the Buck: User-Capped i5 520s Versus Windows X64 Servers

PowerTech Issues Third Annual State of i5/OS Security Report

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Big Iron
HP, Intel, and Oracle Gang Up on IBM Mainframes

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Windows Observer
IBM Launches Service for Virtual Windows Desktop Management

Microsoft First Quarter Revenues, Profit Up 11 Percent

Liquid Computing Starts Shipping LiquidIQ Servers

The X Factor: Form Follows Function

The Unix Guardian
Sun Ponders the Future of Virtualized Solaris

Sun Builds on Growth in Fiscal Q1, But Profits Still Elude

Solaris 10 Breaks Through 6 Million Shipment Barrier

The X Factor: Form Follows Function


 
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