EMC’s Atmos Tackles Cloud-Storage Challenges

EMC on Monday announced its first cloud-infrastructure offering. Dubbed EMC Atmos, the offering is a multi-petabyte information-management solution that aims to help customers automatically manage and optimize the distribution of rich, unstructured knowledge across global, cloud-storage environments.

As EMC describes it, Atmos makes a way for Web 2.0 and Net providers, telecommunications, media and entertainment companies to securely build and deliver cloud-based information-centric services and applications on a massive scale by providing the capabilities of centralized management and automated data placement on a global scale.

Combined with the growth of user-generated subject matter on the Web, Web 2.0 applications, including video and photo-sharing services, are creating billions of new documents, videos, digital images and music. The need to serve that substance to hundreds of locations and millions of users around the world demands global-scale info management. Enter cloud optimized storage (COS), a term used to describe current and future global-scale information-management architectures.

Witness a Revolution

“The

explosive growth of user-generated composition is driving the need for an data infrastructure solution that can efficiently and effectively manage petabytes of info,” said Mike Feinberg, senior vice president of EMC’s cloud infrastructure group. “We are witnessing a revolution in the way large customers manage their info globally and deliver new cloud-based services to market.”

Analyst Benjamin Woo of IDC agreed with Feinberg’s assessment. The cloud-computing model, he said, helps companies capitalize on the rapid growth and increasing value of unstructured digital assets by providing an efficient infrastructure that leverages many highly distributed resource acting as a one, local entity.

“A new class of data infrastructure, like EMC Atmos, is therefore needed to help expose the business potential that can be gained from info mobility through an ‘any-to-any’ architecture,” Woo said. “Organizations that leverage that architecture with a highly flexible and granular policy engine will gain a significant competitive advantage.”

EMC…

Orginal post by Mike

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