gnu-misc-discuss
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

NYC LOCAL: Wednesday 29 June 2005 NYLUG: Evan Marcus on Enterprise Archi


From: secretary
Subject: NYC LOCAL: Wednesday 29 June 2005 NYLUG: Evan Marcus on Enterprise Archiving
Date: 28 Jun 2005 15:56:22 -0400

<blockquote
  what="official NYLUG announcement">

 From: Sunny Dubey <info@nylug.org>
 To: nylug-announce@nylug.org
 Date: Fri, 24 Jun 2005 07:25:09 -0400
 Subject: [nylug-announce] New York Linux User's Group Meeting 6/29: Evan 
Marcus on Enterprise Archiving

 June 29th, 2005
 Wednesday
 6:30PM-8:00PM
 IBM Headquarters Building
 590 Madison Avenue at 57th Street
 12th Floor, home to the IBM Linux Center of Competency

 ** RSVP Instructions **
 You must R.S.V.P. for *EVERY* meeting.
 Register at http://rsvp.nylug.org/
 Check in with photo ID at the lobby for badge and room number.


                    Evan Marcus (Archivas)
                           -on-
                    Enterprise Archiving

 Due largely to new governmental regulations such as Sarbanes-Oxley
 and HIPAA, organizations are expected to maintain and protect
 critical fixed-content data, such as medical records, corporate
 financial data, recordings of customer support phone calls, and
 email for long periods of time, often 20 or 30 years or more.
 Traditionally, the method for preserving data for such long periods
 of time has either been to store the data online on large NAS or
 RAID disk arrays or on magnetic tapes or optical disks, which can
 then be stored offsite. 

 Traditionally, storing the data online is very expensive; even at
 today's prices, it can cost over $100/gb to store data on NAS or
 RAID arrays. Tapes and optical disks are less expensive, but are
 prone to being lost, stolen, or damaged (as has happened recently in
 several widely publicized cases). It is also very difficult to
 search off-line (and off-site) media for specific data when lawyers
 demand all email about a particular customer from five years ago,
 and give you 72 hours to deliver it.

 And neither of these solutions are designed for long-term storage,
 protection, and rapid retrieval of data.

 A third method of storing fixed-content data is in a CAS or Content
 Addressable Storage system, where data is stored in an encrypted
 form, based on a hash key. Data can only be retrieved with the
 original application, and there is no way to search the data.

 A newer solution has emerged that is far less expensive than storing
 the data on expensive NAS or RAID arrays, and that will still keep
 data online so that it never leaves the network, and can be easily
 searched and retrieved quickly, since it can be stored in native
 form.

 The solution is an archive cluster, built from a collection of
 inexpensive commodity systems and SATA disks. The hardware is
 arranged into a cluster so that the failure of any disk or system
 (pretty much inevitable when inexpensive hardware is used), or of
 two or three components at the same time, does not affect the safety
 and availability of the data. Data is stored online, is accessible
 through standard interfaces, and is totally searchable. Costs can
 be as low as $12-$15 per GB, depending on the size of the archive,
 and clusters can scale to dozens of petabytes or more.


 About Evan Marcus
 Evan joined Archivas, Inc. in 2005 as a Senior Systems Engineer in
 the Office of the CTO.

 Evan has more than 20 years of experience in Unix systems. Before
 joining Archivas, he spent 8 years at VERITAS Software, as a systems
 engineer, speaker, and author. He also spent 5 years at Sun
 Microsystems and 2=BD years at Fusion Systems, where he worked to
 bring the first high availability software applications for SunOS
 and Solaris to market. He also spent 2 years as a system
 administrator on the equities trading floor of a multinational
 trading institution.

 Evan is the co-author of "Blueprints for High Availability" (2nd Ed:
 Sept. 2003, John Wiley & Sons), and co-author and co-editor of "The
 Resilient Enterprise" (2002, VERITAS Publications). He is a
 well-regarded and popular speaker on the design of highly available
 and disaster resilient systems, and fixed-content storage archives.


 Swag (Give Away) - During the meeting... unusually terrific swag of
 non-predetermined origin will be given out to all attendees at the
 regular meeting for free as usual.

 Stammtisch
 After the meeting ... Join us around 8:30pm or so at TGI Friday's,
 located at 677 Lexington Avenue and 56th Street, second floor.
 Northeast corner.

 Please see our home page at http://www.nylug.org for the HTMLized
 version of this announcement, our archives, and a lot of other good
 stuff.
 ______________________________________________________________________
 Hire expert Linux talent by posting jobs here :: http://jobs.nylug.org
 nylug-announce mailing list nylug-announce@nylug.org
 http://nylug.org/mailman/listinfo/nylug-announce
  
</blockquote>


Distributed poC TINC:

Jay Sulzberger <secretary@lxny.org>
Corresponding Secretary LXNY
LXNY is New York's Free Computing Organization.
http://www.lxny.org

reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]