Key Highlights:
? Lab tested at scale with QCT
? Cloudian HyperStore, with Quanta S1Q servers and Intel Xeon Processor D-1500 Product Family, achieve 3.84PB in a single datacentre rack
“As enterprises collect and consume more data, storage solutions must anticipate the often-competing demands of scalability, energy efficiency and space utilisation in the data centre,” said Michael Tso, CEO and co-founder of Cloudian. “This is why we’re pleased to have qualified the Intel Xeon processor D-1500 Product Family for Cloudian HyperStore 5.2 software. Our software-defined smart data storage means enterprises can take advantage of the latest Intel technology and keep pace with the demands of their business with a massively scalable, industry-standard approach.”
“The Intel Xeon Processor D-1500 Product Family is the first SoC based on Intel Xeon processor technology and is well suited for the demands of emerging storage workloads that are optimised for density and power efficiency,” said Andrea Nelson, director, Storage Group Marketing at Intel. “The integrated SoC dramatically lowers energy consumption, boosts compute power to the network edge and drives down operational costs for large-scale storage implementations. The efficiencies gained with the Intel Xeon Processor D-1500 Product Family and software-defined storage solutions like Cloudian provide flexible, optimised storage for the data centre edge.”
“With Intel Xeon D, we are able to drive greater efficiencies from our catalog of storage services due to the reduced power requirements and improved platform footprint,” said Chris Orlando, co-founder and CSMO of ScaleMatrix. “Our customers need resilient, reliable and cost effective data storage solutions, and the combination of Intel chip technology and Cloudian’s software-defined object storage helps us deliver great performance, manageability, and the seamless scalability we require. The remarkably efficient and robust Intel Xeon D hardware architecture is helping us deliver differentiated services in a highly competitive space.”