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Volume 3, Number 27 -- August 9, 2006

LTO Drives, Libraries Rule the Midrange Tape Storage Market

Published: August 9, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The Linear Tape Open (LTO) tape format created by IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and Seagate Technology shows just how powerful a standard can be. Developed in the late 1990s and commercialized beginning in 2000, LTO has just about taken over the midrange tape drive and tape library markets.

How strong is LTO? Well, ExabyteSony's 8mm AIT tape drives for video cameras to data centers and made buckets of dough in the late 1980s and through the 1990s, has put itself on the auction block after its founder, Juan Rodriguez, resigned. And while the modern VXA implementation of Exabyte's technology is technically good, any standard being pushed by IBM, HP, and Seagate, three of the biggest names in storage and the two biggest brands in servers, is going to cause any alternative technology some grief.

On the library front, LTO libraries also rule the roost, according to a study by Freeman Reports. That market researcher, which specializes in the tape space, said that LTO libraries accounted for 81 percent of all midrange tape libraries shipped in 2005, accounting for more than 46,000 units. In 2004, LTO libraries had 73 percent of the midrange tape library market, and Freeman's Bob Abraham predicts that by 2010, that share will increase to 86 percent.

"Since late 2003, second and third generation LTO products have gained significant market momentum," said Abraham in a statement announcing the report he put together. "Tape storage is essential for best practice data protection strategies and achieving total cost of ownership goals. Large capacities, high transfer rates, full standardization, a well-articulated migration path, high reliability and a competitive environment contribute to the popularity of LTO technology."



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Editor: Alex Woodie
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Microsoft Fixes 23 Security Vulnerabilities with 12 Patches

Windows Server 2003 SP2 Will Be 'Limited Scope'

Windows Compute Cluster Server 2003 Goes GA

The X Factor: Is Memory-Based Software Pricing the Answer?

But Wait, There's More:


Speech Server to be Included in Communication Server, as Voice Recognition Flubs . . . Brocade to Buy McDATA for $713 Million . . . LTO Drives, Libraries Rule the Midrange Tape Storage Market . . . AJAX and Java Use Growing Among Programmers . . . 10 Gigabit Ethernet Rollout Begins at Global 2000 Firms . . . IBM Offers Developers a Free RFID Education . . .

The Windows Observer

BACK ISSUES

The Four Hundred
Bang for the Buck: Entry i5 Servers Versus the Competition

Infor Closes SSA Buy and Acquires Remaining GEAC Bits

IBM Acquires Webify and MRO to Enhance Software, Services Offerings

The X Factor: High-End Chips Draw Even, Vendors Prepare to Differentiate

The Linux Beacon
IBM Broadens Use of Opterons in System x Servers

Novell Says SLES 10 Has Impressive First Ten Days

IBM Creates a Performance-Based Pricing Scheme for Software

The X Factor: High-End Chips Draw Even, Vendors Prepare to Differentiate

Big Iron
The Sub-Capacity Challenge

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Unix Guardian
The BSD Unix Projects Keep Humming Along

IBM Broadens Use of Opterons in System x Servers

Who's Ahead in the X64 Server Wars?

As I See It: The Donking Life


 
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