Archive for August, 2011
Lies and Virtualization – Capacity Optimization is an Altered Reality
Posted in File and Content Management, Tech Talk, Virtualization on August 26th, 2011 No Comments »
OK, so I lied about my last blog being the final of a three part series (1, 2 & 3). But aren’t we used to being lied to these days? I classify virtualization into three categories of prose: one-to-many, many-to-one, and this-to-that. (Turns out, I thought I blogged about this some time ago, but it [...]
I’m Entitled to Title My Own Titles
Posted in Tech Talk on August 25th, 2011 No Comments »
I’ve been laying it on a little thick technically of late, so I thought I would throw a change-up in the mix before everyone thinks I’m losing my sense of fun. And, I’d rather have fun while working than working to have fun. Plus, my last post was rather long and voluminous, so here’s a [...]
May I Please Have Some More Capacity Optimization, Sir?
Posted in File and Content Management, Tech Talk on August 16th, 2011 No Comments »
So, this is the third and final installment of my blog series on capacity optimization techniques. The first article was on file level single instancing and file level compression, which also included a combination of the two. The second article described how data de-duplication works, which I demonstrated by using Linux commands.
A True Holographic System Would be Disruptive
Posted in Tech Talk on August 9th, 2011 No Comments »
A recent article by The Register’s Chris Mellor was passed my way by a colleague, at a perfect time. I was planning to post a blog this week on Hitachi’s contribution to the world of optical and holographic storage, but I didn’t know how I was going to introduce the subject.
To De-dupe, Or Not to De-dupe, That is De-data
Posted in File and Content Management on August 9th, 2011 3 Comments »
In my last blog, I described some past techniques and the current method of file level single-instancing and its capacity optimization companion, file compression. In this post, I’d like step this up with the more modern approach to capacity optimization—data de-duplication—and I’m going to show you how it’s done.



