SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Middleware - Utilities

EMC integrates drives, backup service

EMC integrates drives, backup service

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 20 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

One analyst says the new offering may be EMC's attempt to push the Iomega brand it bought last year back into the limelight. Why you need backup in the cloud

San Diego, Calif.-based data protection vendor Iomega Corp.’s integration of its external hard drives with storage technology previously acquired by parent company EMC Corp. is likely a move to bring Iomega back to the forefront, said one analyst.

Iomega, acquired by EMC last June, is rolling out its external hard drives, targeted at consumers and small to medium-sized businesses, with a downloadable software bundle that integrates Retrospect Express local backup and recovery software, and Mozy online backup service.

EMC acquired Dantz Development Corp., developer of Retrospect software, in 2004; and Berkeley Data Systems, developer of Mozy software, in 2007.

“This sort of seems like EMC’s play to get Iomega back into the spotlight,” said Laura Hansen, research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group.

Besides, EMC doesn’t have a good history with integration, said Hansen, citing VMware as still its own entity, and the lack of indication on Mozy’s Web site that it’s owned by EMC. The company may be trying to ameliorate the fact that Iomega “fell to the wayside in the 90s” with this roll out, said Hansen.

Customers of Iomega external hard drives can choose a version of Retrospect Express software the works best for them, and either a free version of MozyHome 2GB or unlimited MozyHome for a fee.

While EMC’s primary focus has been enterprise storage, small to medium-sized businesses “have many of the same storage dilemmas as many of the major enterprises do,” said Jonathan Huberman, president of the consumer and small business products group at EMC, of the rationale behind the acquisition of Iomega by EMC.

The integration of Retrospect and Mozy storage technology is “the first step” in Iomega’s strategy to combine technologies acquired by EMC for consumers and small to medium-sized businesses, said Huberman.

Later this summer, Iomega will roll out a new Linux software stack for network products featuring local and remote backup, as well as additional features like security from RSA Security Inc. and de-duplication from Avamar Technologies Inc. RSA and Avamar were acquired by EMC in 2006.

Having both local and remote backup in one product means managing data protection with a single user interface, said Huberman, instead of two consoles running two different applications.

While local backup is necessary given that the majority of data loss occurs at the main hard drive level, said Huberman, the ability to remotely backup is also vital. “It’s rare to have a disaster where you have a fire or a situation where both primary and local backup go down,” he said, “however that does happen occasionally.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 711   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

Related Content

BEA takes an SOA approach to e-commerce
BEA takes an SOA approach to e-commerceOracle's latest conquest offers a product update designed to help online retailers to manage multiple stores on a single installation and the addition of more than 30 new Web services, such as extensive APIs
Symantec calls for more unity
Symantec calls for more unityUnder a strategy dubbed Storage United, Symantec says it will release new products and services allowing users to control storage across different arrays from one platform.
Symantec offers 'Storage United' strategy
Symantec offers 'Storage United' strategyJohn Thompson keynote looks beyond firm's history in security
Microsoft's Live Mesh: The IT department implications
even though it seems to signal a shift from its pc-centric corporate philosophy, i wouldn’t ca
Veritas storage management suite improved
symantec corp. has enhanced veritas commandcentral, its storage optimization suite, to include agentless capabilities in a new feature called storage change manager. the result is said to increase storage utilization and control demand by mapping storage consumptio
blog comments powered by Disqus