XServe RAID Finally Makes An Entrance
Currawong writes "Apple's very delayed 3U XServe RAID box has quietly appeared on their web site with details. Most interesting being that it uses ATA100 drives, rather than the usual SCSI, making it a bargain at US$10,999 for 2.52TB, especially compared to similar devices that cost up to 10 times as much for the same storage capacity. In addition, ATTO announced at the same time a MacOSX only dual-channel fibre channel SCSI card."
I wonder what kind of acceptance rate the Xserve RAID will acheive. It seems like a useful product, but might only get niche use, as many people still view Apple products as incompatible, expensive, and underpowered, regardless of the truth. *sigh*
That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
Hey guys, MacSlash called, they want their story from February 10th back.
The xServe RAID box has been out for a month. Why is this "news"?
Nope, this is *not* news, the XRaid is over a month old now.
I think Apple are approaching this carefully, there aren't a huge number of orders, and they know that in the server area they have to be established and seen as a long term player to gain serious marketshare. So they're doing this humbly and slowly, making sure that they get things right.
They are *not* betting the farm on the server solutions, they are great products and I think its good to see the company diversifying both above (XServe XRaid) and below (iPod) their usual established market area.
-Nex
This sig has been deprecated.
does your equivalent system hav dual, redundant power supplies, dual controllers? dual ethernet? dual fiber channel? independent masters on all the disks? fit in 3-U, have hot swap? Web browser based administration? have a 3 year 4 hour response time warntee? have an available replacemt kit for all the parts? have legendary apple quality?
then there is the cost of installation and maintainence. does your system come out of the box, plug it in and spend less than ten minutes to configure it to run samba, nfs, appleshare, apache, LDAP, DNS, Netboot server, mailserver over a dual ethernet gigbit interface? with an unlimited client lic?
I'll answer for you. NO.
If you're looking for budget NAS, then you're right -- but the XServe isn't budget NAS. It's designed to compete with solutions from Sun, Dell, and IBM. And compete it does -- a client of mine managed to get two prepro models from Apple (they were basically testing them, then got to keep them). Set up as RAID 5, they are effectively as fast as a the Sun fibre channel array they are going to replace, but cost about a third as much per gig. Amazing hardware. I highly reccommend.
Statistically speaking, there's a 99.998% chance that my IQ is higher than yours. Get over it.
Anyway, aren't you going to debate over ATA100 vs. SCSI or something? ;)
What is the point of the internet?
With the "that's so expensive! You can get more storage than that for $11k and more an actual computer to boot!"
This is not an offering from Apple that is designed to compete for storage in the home, except maybe for those individuals running a small business. This is not just a "bunch of storage," this is a high-quality server solution that is designed to compete with Sun and IBM.
This thing has a battery backup module for the cache, dual and *independant* RAID controllers, redundent *cooling* (incidentally, these are self regulating as well), and redundent power supplies. It also all fits inside of a 3U case, which is phenomenal, and hot-swapable drives.
Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
And it was prominently displayed alternating between both the large, main feature, and one of the 3 smaller features. This was huge a month ago; every Mac site (and slashdot) carried it.
One thing that is rather cool to see is Apple's pricing of their fiber channel card.
500 bucks...
If indeed this is a standard fiber channel pipe, that's a bargain. Most of the SANs I've seen run around $2000 for such a card, and it makes adding fiber worthwhile on a desktop G4 even if you need the bandwidth.
-Barkeep, a draft of your most hazardous brew, for the world is slowly stepping into focus, and I don't like what I see.
Slashdot.org has a much larger and broader audience, than Macslash, so with that in mind having this re-run article gives more PR for Apple's X-RAID Product, yes?
If you don't read macslash and you do read apple.slashdot, then this is news. I of course load www.apple.com and store.apple.com 2 or 3 times a week, so its not news to me. Don't assume everyone reads the same websites that you do, because they don't. I emailed the link to this /. article to someone at work yesterday, and it was news to them. Before you bash people, think about it. :)
(Don't flag me as FLAMEBAIT please!
--
Nate Hart -
(you figure it out)
http://bonez.net/
Is it okay to tcsh people before you think about it?
"The great thing about multitasking is that several things can go wrong at once." -me
Yes, that's right, each drive gets its own independent ATA channel to itself, which allows Apple to acheive redundancy, speed, and a low overall price.
Go back and read the comment again. It says that it maxes out the fibre channel connectivity. What more do you want? If it was ultra160 SCSI, it wouldn't matter, it would be limited by the speed of the fibre channel connection.
--
Nate
n h a r t @ n e t . b o n e z
(reverse net & bonez)
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