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| STORAGE ALL-STARS Cabell Huntington Hospital | Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering | Kindred Healthcare | Las Vegas Review-Journal |
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At Las Vegas Review-Journal, company growth - largely through acquisition - had turned data storage into a huge management challenge. By addressing the problem using innovative class-of-service technology, IT has eased the storage burden while saving the company money - and netting it a 2006 Enterprise All-Star Award.
Steve Olson, infrastructure manager at the Las Vegas-based publishing group, describes his quandary. The most business-critical editorial, advertising and accounting data was stored on a 4TB EMC Symmetrix DMX 8530 array and a 1TB EMC Celerra network-attached storage (NAS) array. Desktop data - files, e-mail and archived documents - was mostly stored on about 60 Macintosh, Solaris and Windows servers at 40 sites in nine states, but some of it resided on the high-end Symmetrix. Storing nonbusiness-critical desktop data on expensive primary storage didn't make sense; neither did buying more servers with direct-attached storage, which would have complicated the management problem, he says.
"We needed storage that didn't need to be as fast or as expensive for our Tier-2 data," Olson says. He wanted a system to which he could move the less business-critical data being stored on the Symmetrix as well as for the messaging, home directory and file data being stored on the servers.
Comments (1)
Data managementBy Las on July 31, 2008, 4:06 amdata management is always a big dilemma whenever you have a growing internet based company like the las vegas review journal. well good luck to them
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