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Information Lifecylcle Management (ILM)
It’s widely accepted that up to 80 per cent of data held online will never, in fact, be needed. Why isn’t this data simply removed? Again, it’s mostly because there are no adequate tools to automatically analyse the data and accurately predict which 20 per cent will be required. Sixty four per cent of IT managers do not have a centralised view of all their data.
Integrated Storage Management:
enabling real Information Lifecycle Management
"ILM calls for the deployment of a range of different media and
storage types that deliver capacity, resiliency, portability, and
performance at different price points, with the goal of migrating data
onto the most suitable storage medium at each point during its life
cycle."
Crucially, though - and terminal to any pretence they may actually
contribute to an ILM strategy - most existing solutions are actually
unable to ensure that data is copied and positioned in the right place,
and in the right format and on the right media. The inevitable
conclusion is that any company pursuing an ILM strategy is currently
going to be disappointed at some stage in the process.
Integrated Storage Management (ISM): the basis of real ILM
ILM is all about the underlying storage management services and their
accessibility to the user and the application. NAS works with best of
breed software houses and our ISM suite of products provides a fully
integrated, complete storage management approach to the ILM challenge by
embracing the ILM philosophy but adding policies and automation. A full
compliment of integrated data movement services including backup,
archive, migration, replication and HSM, makes it an achievable reality
rather than a far off destination.
Essentially, the ISM suite makes the whole set of basic storage
management services available to any application throughout the
environment.
The longer it takes for Integrated Storage Management/Information
Lifecycle Management to become a reality, the bigger the situation to be
resolved will become: new IDC research suggests that data will still
continue to show an average growth rate of 50 per cent compound, until
2007. This means that, within just two years, the problem will be more
than twice as big if left unchecked between now and then.
