tug
Volume 3, Number 45 -- December 7, 2006

Disk Array Sales Keep Revving in Q3, Says IDC

Published: December 7, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The server market saw a tiny uptick in sales in the third quarter of 2006, but the external disk array market saw a much more pronounced increase, according to research by IDC. The storing of new kinds of rich content as well as server consolidation is driving up capacity sold and revenues, said IDC.

In the third quarter, sales of all kinds of disk storage systems (both internal to servers and externally attached) increased by 7.9 percent to $6.2 billion, IDC reckons. External disk array sales--which means machines that attach to servers through Fibre Channel, Ethernet, or other kinds of links--rose by 9.9 percent to $4.3 billion. This was the 14th consecutive quarter of external disk array revenue increased on a year-on-year basis. When you do the math that means that sales of internal disk array sales increased by only 3.6 percent to $1.9 billion. Customers bought a combined 783 petabytes of disk array capacity worldwide during the quarter, across all types of units and including both internal and external arrays.

"There was a marked increase in average size and selling price for disk storage systems in the third quarter, particularly for systems selling between $50,000 and $300,000," explained Brad Nisbet, program manager with IDC's storage systems research unit. "IDC believes these larger systems are being fueled by a variety of drivers, including the consolidation that results from increased server virtualization, branch office consolidation, and a new wave of organizations looking to store vast amounts of fixed content."

In the overall storage array market, Hewlett-Packard continued to dominate, with $1.4 billion in sales, up 4.7 percent but barely outgrowing the market. IBM came in second, with $1.25 billion in sales, up 7.2 percent, followed by EMC with $927 million in sales, up 18 percent, and Dell, with $507 million in sales, up 5 percent. Hitachi, which resells midrange and high-end disk arrays to Sun Microsystems and HP, came in fifth with $348 million in its own direct sales, up 4.8 percent. Sun did not rate moving out of the Others category, which accounted for $1.75 billion in sales, up 7.7 percent.

Looking just at external SAN and NAS array sales, EMC's $927 million in sales gave it the top spot, which the company has held for many years, followed by HP, with $760 million in sales, up a meager 1.8 percent. IBM continues to get traction with its DS series of Power-based arrays, with external array sales up 14.3 percent to $591 million. Dell, which sells a line of external arrays that are co-developed with EMC, had $347 million in external array sales in the third quarter, up 7.7 percent, while Hitachi grew external disk array sales by 5.1 percent to $340 million. All of the other vendors in the external array category accounted for $1.36 billion in sales, up $9.6 billion.



Sponsored By
MICRO FOCUS

Now you can go direct to Micro Focus...

Announcing direct sales, service and support
for HP and Micro Focus customers!

All versions of Micro Focus products previously sold through HP or an HP reseller are now sold, serviced and supported directly by Micro Focus.

For more information, or to talk to a dedicated HP conversion specialist:

www.microfocus.com/hpconversion
1-800-632-6265 Option 2
HPConversion-US@microfocus.com



Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

World Data Products:  FREE 84-page Unix/Midrange Server Spec Book
FreeBSD:  Advanced OS for X86 and X64, Alpha/AXP, IA-64, PC-98, and Sparc architectures
COMMON:  Join us at the Annual 2007 Conference & Expo, April 29 - May 3, in Anaheim, California

 
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Canvas Systems
MKS
Lakeview Technology
Roaring Penguin
Micro Focus



TABLE OF CONTENTS
AIX 5L V5.3 Gets Unix 03 Certification

Azul Systems Revamps Compute Appliances with 48-Core Vega2 Chip

PwC Consultants Predict an IT Talent Shortage

Mad Dog 21/21: Stay the Recourse

But Wait, There's More:


Reader Feedback on As I See It: The Other "Tude" . . . AMD Creates Two-Socket Athlon FX Variant, Demos Quad-Core Opteron . . . IBM Tweaks BladeCenter H Chassis for Telcos . . . Gartner Predicts Half of Data Centers Will Run Out of Power by 2008 . . . Disk Array Sales Keep Revving in Q3, Says IDC . . . Phishing, Zero-Days Top Symantec's Security List . . .

The Unix Guardian

BACK ISSUES

The Four Hundred
The System iWant, 2007 Edition

PwC Consultants Predict an IT Talent Shortage

Saving the System i: Fight Rather Than Switch

The X Factor: You Can't Steal What's Free, But You Can Pay a Lot for Something That Isn't Worth It

The Linux Beacon
Novell Previews Open Enterprise Server 2, Delays SLES 10 SP1

Hitachi Brings BladeSymphony Blade Servers to North America

AMD Creates Two-Socket Athlon FX Variant, Demos Quad-Core Opteron

As I See It: Behavioral Redlining

Big Iron
IBM's Last, Best Shot at the Big Iron Client

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Windows Observer
Microsoft Completes the 'Triple Launch'

Dell Carves Out Energy-Efficient PowerEdge Server Line

Microsoft's Business Intelligence Plan for the Masses

AMD Creates Two-Socket Athlon FX Variant, Demos Quad-Core Opteron


 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement