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Microsoft Tap Dances Until 2000.


This spring's PC Expo in New York might be characterized as more directional than innovative. Numerous companies announced product and business strategies and new distribution programs, while relatively few were showing groundbreaking new technology. And even those companies which did roll out new products were somewhat eclipsed by Microsoft's massive campaign to get all of its version 2000 products out the door. Still, digging deep has its rewards, and the following presents a somewhat jaundiced view of several of the new technologies that lurked just below the surface of the steamy greenhouse known as the Javitz Center.

IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries)  introduced a broad SAN strategy, one which includes new products, a road map for future SAN hardware and software, a new testing center, and an interoperability commitment. Big Blue rolled out Netfinity and NT-based SAN solutions, including a SAN-optimized enterprise server for the datacenter that supports up to eight 550MHz Pentium III processors. The company's Tivoli division said that, starting in Q3 1999, its SAN solution will include both multi-vendor tape pooling and LAN-free backup, with future (read: early next year) enhancements to include server less backup, disk pooling, and data sharing. IBM also announced that next year, its entire line of AS/400e servers will be SAN-ready.

At the show, IBM introduced new SAN Fibre Channel fabric A Fibre Channel fabric (or Fibre Channel switched fabric, FC-SW) is a switched fabric of Fibre Channel devices enabled by a Fibre Channel switch. Fabrics are normally subdivided by Fibre Channel zoning. Each fabric has a name server and provides other services.  hardware, including an 8 and 16 port Fibre Channel Switch In a computer storage field, a Fibre Channel switch is a network switch compatible with Fibre Channel (FC) protocol. It allows the creation of a Fibre Channel fabric, that is currently the core component of most storage area networks.  and SAN Data Gateway Services to help enterprises manage their storage solutions. IBM is supporting efforts to make all major relational databases SAN-ready, and Big Blue also plans to establish a storage solution interoperability lab at the National Testing Center in Gaithersburg, Maryland. The company hopes to use its experience with ESCON (Enterprise Systems CONnection) An IBM S/390 fiber-optic channel that transfers 17 Mbytes/sec over distances up to 60 km depending on connection type. ESCON allows peripheral devices to be located across large campuses and metropolitan areas.  to help it make FICON (FIber CONnector) An IBM mainframe channel introduced with its G5 servers in 1998. Based on the Fibre Channel standard, it boosts the transfer rate of ESCON's half-duplex 17MB/sec to a full-duplex 100MB/sec.  the interoperability standard in the enterprise SAN market. IBM said that all of its SAN products will be compliant with future SNIA (Storage Networking Industry Association, San Francisco, CA, www.snia.org) An organization devoted to the advancement of mission critical storage systems. Founded in 1997, its goal is to determine the standards that must be developed to allow hosts and storage systems to interact via  standards, some of which are expected later this year.

Iomega Shows Zip

Storage maven Iomega has decided to enter the rough-and-tumble optical storage market with its new ZipCD drive, which company officials indicated will ship later this year, likely early this half. The internal ATAPI (AT Attachment Packet Interface) The specification for ATA (IDE) tape drives and CD-ROMs. See IDE.

ATAPI - AT Attachment Packet Interface
 4x4x24 CD-RW (CD-ReWritable) The only rewritable CD technology. CD-RW disks look like other CD media, but with close inspection, they have a more polished surface with a very dark blue-gray cast.  drive is a significant departure for a company that has made its reputation primarily on external, easy to install, easy to use Zip and Jaz drives. While installing an internal optical drive has gotten easier--and the company will provide an onscreen animated tutorial with the unit--it does require the dreaded "case crack," something inexperienced users often seek to avoid. Since ZipCD will ship initially only as an internal drive--and will be sold through retail channels, not to OEMs--Iomega seems to be targeting power and semi-power users with its optical drive.

But the drive is not the only story. While Iomega will bundle Adaptec's DirectCD and EasyCD Creator to help users burn CDs, the drive will also include Iomega's new QuikSync software, which performs interventionless CD backup when user-defined files are saved to the hard disk. (QuikSync will also be a free download and can be used with all Iomega removable media drives.)

In interviews, several Iomega officials said that the company's market research has indicated that users want an easy way to back up frequently used data such as documents, email messages, and audio files. However, they acknowledged that while backing up word processing and audio files is relatively simple, doing the same for email is more complicated. Most email programs use a combination of data and TOC files to display data, and users would have to be fairly knowledgeable on the workings of their email applications (and the location of files) to backup email messages.

Iomega is marketing QuikSync as an enterprise solution, one which allows corporate users to back up their own PCs, thus removing the burden from IT. "We're changing the way we support enterprise customers," says Bill Hake hake: see cod.
hake

Any of several large marine fishes (genus Merluccius) usually considered part of the cod family. Hakes are elongated, large-headed fishes with large, sharp teeth, two dorsal fins (one notched), and a notched anal fin.
, Iomega's VP of worldwide OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) The rebranding of equipment and selling it. The term initially referred to the company that made the products (the "original" manufacturer), but eventually became widely used to refer to the organization that buys the products and  sales and Americas sales and marketing. "Providing the best portable storage solutions for the enterprise means delivering high-quality product services and listening and reacting to the needs of enterprise users." Iomega also intends to sell 3-packs of both non-formatted and formatted CDs, with the latter demanding a slight price premium.

Iomega may have heard calls for QuikSync from enterprise users, but somehow I doubt that IT was demanding that end users begin archiving their own hard drives. Such a process represents a new layer of complexity for IT managers to worry about, including data integrity, version control, and privacy issues. There's a reason why most corporate PCs don't have tape drives: archival and backup procedures are generally done over the network to make administration and management easier. Iomega has also just begun shipping the PC Card drive version of its Clik! 40MB product. Pricing is about $200, and media is about $10 when purchased in 10-packs.

Toshiba rolled out a new version of its DVD-RAM A rewritable DVD disc endorsed by the DVD Forum. Using phase change technology, DVD-RAMs are like removable hard disks, and the media can be rewritten 100,000 times compared to 1,000 times for DVD-RW and DVD+RW. The first DVD-RAM drives with a capacity of 2.6GB (single sided) or 5.  drive, the SD-Wlll, which now includes 2MB of cache for faster transfer rates. The drive reads and writes DVD-RAM media at 1,350Kbps, reads DVD-ROM DVD-ROM: see digital versatile disc.


A read-only DVD disc used to permanently store data files. DVD-ROM discs are widely used to distribute large software applications that exceed the capacity of a CD-ROM disc.
 media at 2,700Kbps (2,400Kbps for CD-ROM CD-ROM: see compact disc.
CD-ROM
 in full compact disc read-only memory

Type of computer storage medium that is read optically (e.g., by a laser).
). Burst transfer in SCSI synchronous mode A data transfer mode in which each byte of data transferred does not require an acknowledgment. Contrast with SCSI asynchronous mode.  can reach 20Mbit/sec. The drive is priced at $599 in OEM quantities. While I am prohibited from publishing the details until the fall, I was briefed on a brand new CD-RW drive with technology which the company expects to revolutionize the rewritable drive market and spur adoption rates. Look for details in the September issue.

Philips spinoff OnStream, Inc. has introduced a new 70GB backup drive, the ADR ADR - Astra Digital Radio 7O Digital Tape Drive. The ADR7O is backward compatible (read/write) with other 30 and 50 ADR tape drives and offers transfer speeds of up to 4MB/sec. The drive supports Windows NT, Netware, Linux, and Unix and is based on a LVD See LVDS.

LVD - Low Voltage Differential
 Wide Ultra2-compatible SCSI SCSI
 in full Small Computer System Interface

Once common standard for connecting peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, etc.) to small and medium-sized computers. SCSI has given way to faster standards, such as Firewire and USB.
 3 interface. An internal version is expected to ship in Q3 and will be at $999 (street). External drives will be available shortly thereafter. 70GB media will be available for $69.95 per cartridge.

Computer Associates has leveraged the Unicenter TNG TNG Training
TNG The Next Generation
TNG Tongue
TNG The Newspaper Guild (Union)
TNG Transitional National Government
TNG Telescopio Nazionale Galileo (national facility of the Italian astronomical community) 
 Framework to create SurviveIT, a single-server failover application that is especially designed for high-availability applications like Web commerce and transaction servers. SurviveIT provides automatic failover to a dedicated or non-dedicated server in non-clustered environments, including on a LAN (Local Area Network) A communications network that serves users within a confined geographical area. The "clients" are the user's workstations typically running Windows, although Mac and Linux clients are also used.  or WAN. Applications on multiple machines can failover to a single secondary server, provided it has the necessary resources.

Basically a real-time mirroring application, SurviveIT mirrors updated data (including open files) to a backup server based on user-specified criteria, including transparently (and temporarily) adopting the IP address of the failed machine. It also provides, full administration capabilities from the backup server, allowing the failed server to be brought back online gradually. Included, template-based pre-and post-failover scripts allow databases and applications to be reinstated to the same state as those on the primary server. SurviveIT supports Unicenter TNG and Jasmine, Notes, Microsoft Exchange, SQL SQL
 in full Structured Query Language.

Computer programming language used for retrieving records or parts of records in databases and performing various calculations before displaying the results.
, IIS (Internet Information Services) Microsoft's Web server. IIS runs under the server versions of Windows, adding HTTP server capability to the Windows operating system. , and Proxy server, as well as Netscape SuiteSpot, Oracle Enterprise, and Sybase Adaptive servers, and is customizable to third-party servers. Introductory pricing--which covers the primary and secondary server--is $2,495.

Just after the show, CA also announced SANITI, the company's new SAN initiative that leverages Unicenter TNG to deliver a platform for the management of Storage Area Networks. SANITI (Storage Area Network Integrated Technology Initiative), provides single-console management for end-to-end SAN solutions including Fibre Channel hubs, SAN switches and storage devices. According to company officials, by integrating SAN management into Unicenter, CA is providing an open standard for multi-vendor SAN management. (More than five million copies of the Unicenter TNG Framework have shipped thus far.) CA is working on joint development with its SAN partners, including Ancor, Brocade, Crossroads, and Vixel.

"Through SANITI, CA is providing an effective solution for accomplishing this essential integration objective and ensuring that customers can leverage this open SAN management standard to mix and match SAN products," says Yogesh Gupta, CA senior vice president of product strategy.

The SAN-enabled Unicenter TNG Framework is available at no cost, as are the integration tools that allow support for third-party SAN products. A downloadable upgrade module that adds SAN support to all existing Unicenter TNG Framework instances is available from CA and third parties.

"At this stage in the development of SANs, customers are looking for road maps from their enterprise management vendors," says Paul Mason, vice president of infrastructure software research at International Data Corp. "They want an open solution that will accelerate the adoption of SAN solutions in the enterprise, preferably one that has a single console that provides a multivendor, multiplatform management solution for all SAN components."

At press time, CA was scheduled to demonstrate SANITI, along with other SAN technologies, at CA-World 1999 in New Orleans in mid-July.
COPYRIGHT 1999 West World Productions, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Industry Trend or Event; PC Expo
Author:Piven, Joshua
Publication:Computer Technology Review
Date:Aug 1, 1999
Words:1444
Previous Article:Ask The SCSI Expert.(Questions and Answers)(Technology Information)
Next Article:GET READY FOR INTELLIGENT TAPE.(data storage industry analysis)(Industry Trend or Event)
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