facebookpixel

This Week at the Q

ActiveScale

Welcome to another entry of ‘This Week at the Q’ and our top 5 highlights.

  1. With our recently announced ActiveScaleTM Object Lock feature for data immutability, your data can be protected from malicious acts such as data deletion, relocation, and ransomware. We now have a new video explaining how this works – watch here !
active scale video grab

2. And for more advice to proactively combat the onslaught of ransomware attacks and the elements needed for a solid data protection plan, read more in this Security Magazine blog, “End the vicious ransomware cycle.”

3. Quantum will be at Tech Field Day on December 9th, from 8-10am PT! This event brings together a group of technical influencers and experts to explore the technical underpinnings and architectures of invited vendors. If you want to learn more about our ActiveScale object storage for private cloud, the event is live streamed and you can follow along live via Twitter @TechFieldDay or online during the time slots below:

tech field day logo 1
Time (PT) Section Speaker
8:00AM Quantum Company Overview Ed Fiore, General Manager
8:20AM ActiveScale Object Storage Intro Thomas Demoor, Lead Architect
9:00AM ActiveScale Layered Architecture  Thomas Demoor, Lead Architect
9:20 AM ActiveScale Product Summary Thomas Demoor, Lead Architect
9:30AM ActiveScale Product Demo Sherman Schorzman, Technical Marketing Engineer

4. We also recently launched our all-new All-Terrain File System, ATFS. Hear from early customer, The Hormel Institute, University of MN, about how they accelerated cancer research and improved ROI using ATFS’s zero-touch data classification and automated policies for data mobility. Read their case study here.

quote

5. And one more ATFS case study! The production experts at 5 guys named Moe had challenges ingesting multiple tapes (assume tape equals a movie or season episode) in parallel, tracking the progress of data through the workflow stages, and managing resources for productivity. Read their case study here to see how Quantum ATFS data insights and automation meet storage needs for productivity and profitability improvements.

quote2

Leave a comment if there are topics you’d like to see added to our weekly top 5 happenings!

Natasha

To view our Partner blog, click here

Join us at Tech Field Day!

ActiveScale

Quantum is pleased to present at the upcoming Tech Field Day , held virtually on Dec 9th

Tech Field Day is an event unlike any other in the industry.  At each Tech Field Day, a group of technical influencers and experts, called delegates, participate with leading IT vendors to explore products and their technical underpinnings.  There are no sales pitches or marketing presentations at Tech Field Day events.  Instead, vendors provide a deep dive into their product architectures and give the delegates the opportunity to probe deeper via live questions which represent the perspectives of technical end users.  These events are open to anyone to watch live, and all the presentations are made public shortly after the event. 

At the next event, Quantum will share another significant step in our vision to lead in video and unstructured data solutions and represent a key shift in focus from ‘storing’ data to ‘managing’ data. This event is a great way to learn about Quantum’s underlying technology that differentiates ActiveScale from other products.

 Follow along live via twitter @TechFieldDay or online during the time slots below. 

Time (PT) Section Speaker
8:00AM Quantum Company Overview Ed Fiore, Primary Storage, General Manager
8:20AM Object Storage and ActiveScale Introduction Thomas Demoor, ActiveScale  Lead Architect
9:00AM ActiveScale Layered Architecture  Thomas Demoor, ActiveScale, Lead Architect
9:20 AM ActiveScale Product Summary Thomas Demoor, ActiveScale, Lead Architect
9:30AM ActiveScale – Product Demonstration Sherman Schorzman, ActiveScale Technical Marketing Engineer
tech field day logo

To view our Partner blog, click here

This Week at the Q

ActiveScale

Welcome to another entry of ‘This Week at the Q’ and our top 5 highlights. It’s been a busy week continuing the product announcements from our expanded portfolio!

1. Continuing on the news from last week’s launch of our new expanded portfolio – covered here in Blocks & Files – this week we announced more details around our next-gen StorNext® 7 high-performance file system and ActiveScaleTM object storage advancements.

sn gui

2. This new byline by Matt Dewey on “Managing Complex Object Stores” just published in Disaster Recovery Journal. Object stores have found a home in the cloud and in data centers, becoming the repository for long-lived and high-value data. Read more here to learn about use cases for object storage, its advantages in key markets, as well as some of the challenges it can present and what to consider.

activscale

3. We enjoyed connecting with the high-performance computing community this week at the virtual SC20 event. If we missed you, you can still check out this video interview we did with InsideHPC, “At Virtual SC20: Quantum Corp. Takes on High Performance Storage of Unstructured Data.”

sc20

4. Check out this new blog post, “Cyber Insurance Market is Evolving Due to Ransomware Demands.” You can learn how the cyber security insurance market is evolving amidst an increase in ransomware demands and payments. Insurance companies are starting to move the risk over to subscribers, requiring stricter controls. Read more here.

cyber insurance

5. One of the reasons I love working at Quantum is the culture and the people I get to work with every day, and it is most definitely an honor to work with Liz King! Get to know Quantum’s CRO a little more in this new Authority Magazine article, ”Women of the C-Suite: Liz King of Quantum.”

liz king 1

Leave a comment if there are topics you’d like to see added to our weekly top 5 happenings!

Natasha

To view our Partner blog, click here

Re-Imagining Quantum’s Portfolio for Managing Unstructured Data

ActiveScale

This week, we made a significant announcement, introducing an expanded portfolio focused on classifying, managing, and protecting unstructured data across its lifecycle. The new products we introduced represent another significant step in our vision to lead in video and unstructured data solutions and represent a key shift in focus from ‘storing’ data to ‘managing’ data. 

Accelerating Data Growth, Data Movement, and Use of Hybrid- and Multi-Cloud

Our customers are dealing with massive unstructured data sprawl – video, digital images, and other forms of unstructured data are growing by 30-60% per year. Many of our customers have millions or billions of files and lack visibility into what they have, and where it lives. This lack of visibility combined with the velocity of data growth is putting pressure on infrastructure costs and forcing companies to rethink infrastructure designs. 

At the same time, the COVID pandemic has resulted in permanent changes to the workforce, driving more data movement (between edge / core / cloud), and an acceleration in the adoption of hybrid-cloud and multi-cloud. The emergence of AI and machine learning techniques provide new tools to leverage this data, and is also driving new lifecycle and ‘workflow’ requirements for this data, including a desire to preserve and protect this data and keep it accessible for decades. 

All of this adds up to what we see as the key challenge facing our customers in this decade – how to unlock business value out of all of this data, and manage this data across the entire multi-decade lifecycle of this data.

Manage Unstructured Data, Across Any Workload, End-to-End with Quantum

Our expanded portfolio can help our customers tackle this challenge, starting with new ways to classify and manage data across its lifecycle, for any workload, end-to-end. This expanded portfolio is depicted and summarized below:

atfs graphic

The new announcements include:

  • New ways to visualize, automate, and purposefully place data, with Quantum’s All-Terrain File System (ATFS) , a next-gen storage platform targeted at the NAS market. 
  • StorNext 7 The latest version of Quantum’s high-performance file system, for high throughput low-latency workloads. StorNext 7 introduces new features like file system pools that optimize the use of NVMe for production storage, as well as new ways to program and manage the file system.
  • An expanded ActiveScale object storage portfolio , including a new 3-node object storage system, object lock to protect against ransomware, and small object aggregation to improve the performance of small objects.

Lastly, all of these new offerings are available on a capacity basis, with new all-inclusive software licensing that aligns our licensing with the value we are delivering to customers. 

We look forward to engaging with customers and partners on this expanded portfolio – to learn more, please register for our VirtualQ I Transform event where we will be showcasing all of these new solutions.

To view our Partner blog, click here

This Week at the Q

cloud

Welcome to another entry of ‘This Week at the Q’ and our top 5 highlights!

1. We have some great new explainer videos highlighting some key features of our ActiveScaleTM software that ensure data availability and integrity with a hands-off experience. Intelligent Dynamic Data Placement (DDP) and Dynamic Data Repair (DDR) are key to data’s long-term viability by monitoring data health and providing repair when errors are discovered. Learn more about DDP here and DDR here .

2. Customer success is always a favorite highlight in our week! This week we feature Canal Extremadura in Spain. As they made the transformation from a traditional radio and TV business to a modern multimedia corporation, they also needed to revamp a complex and aging IT infrastructure. Quantum collaborated and provided the content access and scalability needed for an evolving business.  Read more in Canal Extremadura’s case study here .

canal

3. Check out this new case study from our partner, Chesa. Cortina Productions, located in the DC metro area, designs and produces multimedia experiences for museums, cultural institutions, visitor centers, and aquariums across the world. With 4D theaters, and AR and VR experiences, they’re on the forefront of technology. We’re proud to have partnered with Chesa to help manage Cortina’s data more efficiently and with improved accessibility to support their more complex projects and rapid growth.

4. Want to run a cloud-based application against data that StorNext® has stored in the cloud? Need access to that data from other sites? Looking to share files with business partners via the cloud? It’s all possible! Read more in this new blog from Dan Duperron.

5. Did you miss our pumpkin carving event? Learn from the master pumpkin carver from Maniac Pumpkin Carvers. You can check out the replay here – and enter our contest by posting your photos with hashtag #QuantumTransformedPumpkins. We will announce winners on social media!

quantum pumpkin image

Leave a comment if there are topics you’d like to see added to our weekly top 5 happenings!

Natasha

To view our Partner blog, click here

Leveraging StorNext’s Self-Describing Objects

cloud

Want to run a cloud-based application against data that StorNext has stored in the cloud? Now you can.  Need access to that data from other sites? Now it’s possible. Looking to share files with business partners via the cloud? You’ve got it. Even if you just want insurance that you can always get your data back from the cloud, through disaster or technology obsolescence, it’s here.

StorNext has been ‘cloud-aware’ for a very long time, making it easy to use public cloud destinations or on-prem object stores to store and protect warm and cold data. With the release of v6.4, StorNext can now store additional metadata with objects, including the full path and filename of the source file.  Previously, this information was only available by querying StorNext directly. Storing the path and filename in the cloud with the object makes these objects “self-describing.”

To enable massive scale, StorNext stores the source path and filename in a user-defined metadata field.  You can see the contents of this field using tools like the AWS Console, S3 Browser or Cyberduck. That’s fine if you only have a few objects to manipulate, but if you need to handle a lot of objects, it’s better to write a script.

I am not a programmer. I have done some coding, but mostly in C back when I was an EE student, and that was almost 30 years ago.  So, believe me when I tell you that if I can do this, you can do this.

Below is a sample script that will copy every object from a StorNext-controlled AWS bucket down to the local machine, naming the resulting files using the paths and filenames stored by StorNext with the objects.

I used PowerShell on Windows because it seemed minimally intimidating, and because Amazon has something called AWS Tools for PowerShell that provides easy access to AWS APIs. In case you didn’t know, PowerShell is available for Linux and MacOS too, and the basic concepts I used could easily be translated to your favorite development environment.

Here’s the script:


# Credentials must have been established prior to running this script using 'Set-AWSCredential' directly or recalling a stored profile
 
# Set source bucket and destination local path
$bucket = '228868asn64tapeaws'
$localPath = 'C:test'
 
# Scan all objects in bucket, load metadata into array 'objects'
$objects = Get-S3Object -BucketName $bucket
 
# Loop through object metadata, pull object keys into array 'fileName'
foreach ($object in $objects) {
$fileName = $object.Key
 
# Loop through array 'fileName', & for each object key do a few things:
foreach ($file in $fileName) {

# Get object metadata
$Metadata = Get-S3ObjectMetadata -Bucketname $bucket -Key $fileName -Select 'Metadata’

# Set 'localFileName' to SN stored path
$localFileName = $Metadata.Item('x-amz-meta-path')

# Create valid local path including filename
$localFilePath = Join-Path $localPath $localFileName

# URL Decode local path
$localFilePath = [System.Web.HttpUtility]::UrlDecode($localFilePath)

# Download object to local path & name
Read-S3Object -BucketName $bucket -Key $fileName -File $localFilePath }}

That’s it. Less than a dozen lines of code, and I bet someone smarter could make it even simpler. When you run it, you get a result that looks like this:

sn blog 1

It is much more useful than what you get if you simply download the objects, which looks like this:

filename

This was a dirt-simple example, (and it comes with absolutely no warranty), but even I can see that the possibilities for customization are endless. We have plans to make it easier to browse and re-use objects for ad-hoc use cases, but for handling lots of objects or where complex filtering is required, scripting will always be the best way. I hope I’ve convinced you that it doesn’t have to be hard. For complete details on how I set up AWS Tools for PowerShell and additional information, please see our Tech Brief entitled “Accessing StorNext Self-Describing Objects with PowerShell” available here .

Final note: Thanks to everyone who shares their PowerShell knowledge on the ‘Net. This blog in particular provided a critical jump start to my thinking.

To view our Partner blog, click here