Oracle Road Map Includes Continued Investment in Sun's Tape Storage
Oracle Road Map Includes Continued Investment in Sun's Tape Storage
When Oracle was going through legal contortions with the European
Commission over its pending acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2009,
co-founder and CEO Larry Ellison was asked
on several occasions what Oracle was planning to do with Sun's many hardware
businesses.
The questions referred to Sun's divisions that designed, but didn't necessarily
build, servers, storage arrays, workstations, thin-client terminals, digital
tape libraries, processors, networking (yes, Sun made a networking switch) and
several other types of IT.
Would Oracle, which has produced only a modicum of hardware in its 33-year
history, continue to invest in all those businesses-some of which were leaking
red ink?
"I know a lot of people wonder why a highly successful software company
like Oracle wants to buy Sun, with all of its lower-margin hardware
businesses," Ellison
said at a Churchill Club dinner in San Jose,
Calif., in September.
"Well, they're good businesses. Sun has always had some of the world's
best IT, in software and hardware. There are a lot of very smart people working
at Sun. However, they didn't always execute optimally, as we know.
"Oracle's stuff [such as middleware, applications and application
development tools] all runs on Java. Sun is Java. All of Sun's products and
Oracle's products work together very well, and we've benchmarked some of the
fastest performances in the world for big enterprise applications running on
Java, SPARC chips, Solaris, Oracle databases. It's a no-brainer," Ellison
said.
Four months after the Oracle-Sun
merger was completed in January, Ellison has kept his word. Oracle is
investing in the Sun businesses, hiring a group of additional engineers and swiftly
moving into rarified air by becoming an all-purpose IT systems hardware,
software and services supplier alongside IBM
and Hewlett-Packard.
In fact, Ellison's argument is that Oracle-plus-Sun offers a more complete menu
of data center items than either IBM or HP.
But that is a topic for another day.
For now, we will focus on the Oracle storage road map. Not much has been
written, if anything, about what Oracle's plans are for the Sun StorageTek
division in the immediate future.
"Storage is a very important business for Oracle, going forward,"
Ellison said in September. "StorageTek has built a great reputation for
years in its [digital tape] market, and we intend to continue to invest in that
part of the business. A lot of people are still using tape every day, and they
have to be served. Sun has all those super-fast arrays. There is never going to
be a shortage of content to store."
Oracle also intends to invest a great deal in the development of NAND
flash-based storage.
"Flash will turn the storage industry upside down because everything is
designed for disks," former Sun hardware chief and current Oracle Vice President
John Fowler said back on Jan. 27.
Thriving Market for High-End Tape Drives
Jim Cates, Oracle's vice president for development of tape products, started
with StorageTek in 1993, moved to Sun in 2005 and now is deeply embedded in
Oracle's "new" tape-drive division.
Cates acknowledged that sales in the digital tape-drive industry have leveled
off, although there are still a great many machines in daily production in
enterprises around the world.
"As an overall industry that [statement] is true," Cates told eWEEK.
"However, when people say the 'tape industry,' they tend to glob it
together as one big huge entity, but what you see inside the tape industry is
these tiers.
"At the lower end of the tape-drive market, those machines are being
fairly rapidly replaced by disk-to-disk or VTL [virtual tape library] systems.
These are the 20-cartridge machines, things like that. When you get to the midtier,
that's where you see the LTO [linear tape-open] drives, like our SL3000; that's
been a huge business for us," Cates said.
"Then, when you look at the high end, with machines like our big
enterprise [robot-driven] SL8500 drives, that market is actually very vibrant.
This is where we're seeing new customers."
Large machines like the StorageTek SL8500 are used, for example, in television
stations to archive local and network programs, news footage, commercials,
promotional spots, and myriad other video clips. The glass-encased machines
hold thousands of tape cartridges; specific tapes can be requested, located,
moved to a viewing machine and deployed in minutes-and sometimes seconds.
Spectra Logic, which along with StorageTek is based in Colorado, also makes
these enormous video and data storage machines that can cost anywhere from the
high six figures to millions of dollars, depending upon deployment requirements
and the size of the archive. Spectra Logic told eWEEK recently that business
couldn't be better for it right now.
"We're talking about thousands of cartridges-some petabyte tape
deployments," Oracle's Cates said. "We actually have customers
interested in doing that now."
It used to be that tape systems would be attached to dedicated servers, but
that is becoming less common, Cates said.
"Instead, we seeing digital tape being consolidated into larger and larger
libraries," he said. "We're seeing more sharing of tape resources
between different parts of enterprises, also."
Tape, after all, is the greenest form of IT storage because it uses no power
while the data is at rest.
Cates said tape is also being used in some areas-such as weather prediction
data from satellites, scientific experiments, oil and gas exploration, and
health care-as direct-attached storage because the amount of data is so massive
and the cost of the media is low compared with disk storage.
With the already well-established digital tape market for archiving and video
storage continuing to be a viable business, Oracle sees a continuing, long-term
opportunity for maintaining current systems and selling new-generation units as
tape quality and storage software improves, Cates said.
