First published on CloudBlogs on Nov, 20 2013
One year ago this week, Microsoft made an investment in the future of cloud computing. This investment was intended to address one of the cloud’s most persistent issues: Enterprise-grade storage. At the time, this investment was a bit of a surprise to some. Then – as now – the storage industry faced one of its most profound shifts ever, and the changes ahead were going to both challenge and benefit enterprises and service providers. To really get a sense of what was (and is!) coming, consider a couple quick data points:
One year ago this week, Microsoft made an investment in the future of cloud computing. This investment was intended to address one of the cloud’s most persistent issues: Enterprise-grade storage. At the time, this investment was a bit of a surprise to some. Then – as now – the storage industry faced one of its most profound shifts ever, and the changes ahead were going to both challenge and benefit enterprises and service providers. To really get a sense of what was (and is!) coming, consider a couple quick data points:
- Data (in particular unstructured data) is increasing at 40-60% per year.*
- Operating costs are increasing with the growth of storage – and these costs are amplified by regulation that impacts data retention policies.
- Data growth + new regulations that impact data retention have made data protection much harder and much more time/budget consuming.
- Storage options in public clouds, and the adoption of cloud storage is growing.
- Newer storage system designs are consolidating traditionally silo’d (and expensive) data management functions like primary storage, backup, and archiving.
- Seamless integration with Azure that uses public clouds as an extended tier of primary storage as the data gets colder. This tiering radically changes the scalability of traditional on-premises enterprise storage, as well as the cost of maintaining this data.
- Rapid back-up and recovery is made possible via a combination of several processes that automate data protection via snapshots to the cloud, and support much faster data recovery (aka business continuity) than traditional tape backups. This emphasis on continuity is a key part of the disaster recovery scenario; the only data that is actually needed is downloaded to the new data center, and this means the recovery times can often be measured in hours vs. day or weeks.
To learn more about Microsoft’s portfolio of enterprise storage offerings, check out our new storage solutions page .
Published Sep 08, 2018
Version 1.0Brad Anderson
Iron Contributor
Joined September 06, 2018
Microsoft Security Community Blog
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