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IBM Launches New Product Line

An anonymous reader notes that "IBM has launched its new product line of storage devices: the DS6000 and the DS8000. The results are quite impressive, with the DS6000 being rack mountable, 3U, and ONLY 125 pound storage device that will hold up to 67.2 TB! The DS8000 is equally impressive, with 6x performance of ESS 800 (Shark), making it the most powerful storage system to date. "

6 of 222 comments (clear)

  1. To inform by a.different.perspect · · Score: 4, Informative
  2. Actually it's 4.8TB for a single rack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's 67.2 TB if you have 14 racks (224 disks)...a single rack only allows 300Gb x 16drives = 4.8 TB...quite still a lot though.

  3. Writeup is wrong by amorsen · · Score: 5, Informative

    The DS6000 supports up to to 67.2TB, but not in one enclosure. The DS6000 only fits 16 disks per enclosure, and with 400GB disks that is 6.4TB. 400GB disks seem to only be available as SATA and PATA, the largest SCSI disks I could find are 300GB. That means 4.8TB per enclosure. 16 DS6000's per 48U rack, that's 76.8TB. Remove every 8th disk for RAID-5, that's 67.2TB.

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    1. Re:Writeup is wrong by keesh · · Score: 4, Informative

      IBM's standard is 6+P+S (six normal, one parity, one spare). Since the monitoring setup is damned good, and the CEs are really fast in replacing drives, it seems to work. The only reason raid 6 exists at all is because EMC accidentally shipped a bunch of duff drives once.

  4. Product pricing and availability by just+someone · · Score: 5, Informative

    Product pricing and availability
    IBM's new storage offerings with enterprise class functions reset the bar with minimum configurations starting at half a terabyte and list prices starting as low as $97,000. The DS6000 series and the DS8000 series come standard with a four-year warranty on hardware and software, which is unique in the industry.


    What are they smoking? 9.7 k a terrabyte, maybe. 97k. Even EMC is not that high any more.

  5. Re:i hope these restore ibm's name by PygmySurfer · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hitachi took over IBM's Desktop hard drive business.

    And I believe IBM actually had 2 lines that had issues (The 75 GXP and, to a lesser extent, the 60 GXP).

    I had 2 30 GB 75 GXP drives, I think I ended up going through 3 RMAs. Eventually, IBM replaced one with a 60 GB 120GXP (I believe it was the 120 GXP) with an 8mb cache (original drives only had 2mb cache). While the RMAs were a hassle, IBM did a pretty good job of taking care of me.