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Object-based storage gains primary storage traction
This article is part of the Storage issue of Special edition, September 2019
Once used mainly for secondary tier 2 and archival storage, object-based storage is increasingly being used as primary storage for tier 1 workloads. More than three-fourths of IT leaders surveyed by IDC believe object storage is ready to support their organization's leading IT initiatives, including data security, IoT and analytics of unstructured data. While the role of object-based storage will remain strong in secondary storage, the vast majority of those surveyed view it as a mature technology that offers the scalability and flexibility their IT initiatives require. That's because an object storage implementation can, for example, improve data quality and unstructured data analysis. It can also support a wide variety of traditional, public cloud and private cloud platforms. The ability to manage data across platforms and clouds is the most important feature enterprises desire when looking to adopt object-based storage. That is followed by multi-cloud tiering, SSD flash performance enhancements, file system capabilities, ...
Features in this issue
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The secret to reliable storage provisioning for DevOps
Cloud storage and intelligent storage can help provide DevOps teams with the reliable, fast and flexible storage they require at every phase of the application delivery process.
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Object-based storage gains primary storage traction
This infographic illustrates why most IT leaders believe object storage is ready to support leading IT initiatives.
News in this issue
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Cloud repatriation is a symptom of a wider cloud storage trend
People are rethinking their cloud storage strategies, adjusting for hidden costs, application needs and compatibility issues in a world of public, private and hybrid options.
Columns in this issue
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Why cloud block storage deployments are on the rise
Move over object and file storage; use of block storage in the public cloud is increasing as more businesses prepare to move or have already redeployed workloads to the cloud.