TODAY'S TOP STORIES:
STORAGE SERVICE PROVIDERS
Businesses employ a variety of storage services to help them chart their way through proliferating storage options
Silicon Graphics will offer 10 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces on its storage, servers, workstations and graphics systems.
Network Computing reviews five online backup services for agent functionality, ease of use, system-management capabilities, cost and retention schemes.
Small businesses represent a huge opportunity for providers of storage as a service, according to IDC, with the acceptance of storage as a service by small businesses growing as they get used to the idea that much of their business data is already being handled by third parties.
EMC's recent software company-buying binge--Legato Systems, Documentum and VMware--signals a new direction for this storage infrastructure powerhouse: information life-cycle management.
Novell Ships OES, Preps SUSE Linux Pro 9.3 For Mid April
Linux inventor Linus Torvalds pays tribute to Novell's move toward open source.
Cisco released a new switch module for virtualization and SAN extension, along with a host of third parties who will either OEM the module or build application software.
Novell's Open Enterprise Server is expected to begin public beta testing in early November.
Content and document management companies took center stage at a conference and expo for IT and business professionals looking for the latest technologies to develop, capture, manage, and store documents.
Iomega rolled out two models of an entry-level network attached storage (NAS) device the San Diego-based storage vendor is targeting at small- and medium-sized businesses, remote offices, and corporate workgroups.
All-in-one gateway appliances are hot for SOHOs that need broadband WAN/LAN rolled into one. But they're not so easy to manage. Learn what to watch out for and how to cope.
New capability allows nondisruptive changes, such as increases in capacity, to a storage environment.
Sun is introducing enhanced virtualization technology for its UltraSparc T1 CoolThreads servers that will let customers run up to 32 applications simultaneously on a single processor
Storage management grows more sophisticated as business-technology managers seek more control over data