Thursday, July 15, 2004
EMC isn’t the only vendor forcing customers into gold plated solutions. Microsoft only certifies Exchange using Fibre or direct attached storage and just recently announced support for iSCSI. Why not NAS? On a dedicated network running gigabit Ethernet I see no reason why NAS would not work just as well and Fibre or iSCSI given the ingenious approaches to NAS these days. Fibre and iSCSI are moving SCSI commands and NAS moving NFS or SMB, but the application impact under any of these technologies given the state of networking technology is becoming less and less noticeable. The reason vendors like EMC and Microsoft only certify one or two configurations is to keep their support costs down and direct revenue into the most profitable product lines regardless of what might be most cost effective for the customer.
 
I was talking to EMC the other day about an approach to storage for a large Microsoft Exchange deployment. EMC recommends that email go on either Symmetrix or Clariion storage. What? They have a great new line of products perfectly suited and specifically designed to work with Exchange in Centera. It was explained to me that Centera is for email archiving. Actually, no that is what cheap storage is for.

It was clear to me that EMC is up to their old tricks of not wanting to push another product ahead of the Symmetrix line. There are many other companies out there selling Centera-like products that are making decent in roads into the storage market by selling their storage as primary email storage, not archiving. A good one that comes to mind is LeftHand Networks.

I attended a couple of session at the EMC Technology Summit on Centera. If it is all that was claimed in these sessions, I see no technical reason why Centera can't be used as primary storage for large email systems. EMC needs to separate their support policies from sales and marketing objectives.

 
I can already begin to feel the stress and pressure dissipating. I find myself thinking about things I haven't thought about in a long time. Things that I remember being very important to me. Things like music, programming, my weblog, documenting my daughter's first year of life, and working out. I really miss these things. This, perhaps better than anything else, illustrates how skewed life has become.
 
It rocks. I've been using Gimp on Windows for some time which has been a frustrating experience. I finally feel like I've got the full functionality of Gimp under Mac OS X.
 
I wish I had time to create and manage a web site like this for Molly. This is simply amazing. I like to think I'm farely technically advanced, but Ben MacNeill has turned baby weblogging into a true science.
 
This is a great site for finding and analyzing web UI information design. I've found a number of useful concepts through this site spending just half an hour with it. This type of information design, presentation, and analytics are where the Web is headed. I fully expect web site to evolve into densely packed information portals published by individuals in the very near future. These types of presentations increase the bandwidth of communicating over the web.
 
I've had TrackBacks off for a while. I thought I'd turn them back on and see what happens. I'm testing them with this post.
 

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