| Tuesday, May 19 |
| 10:15 am–11:15 am |
Conference Sessions
Storage Virtualization II - Effective Use of Virtualization This session builds on Storage Virtualization I from Interop Las Vegas 08. Attendees should already have a basic understanding of this subject. Storage Virtualization Part II covers practical issues of block virtualization in order to make most effective use of it. This session describes the implementation step-by-step and aspects of availability, performance and capacity improvements. Other topics this session covers includes: the role of storage virtualization within policy-based management, and its integration in the SNIA Storage Management Initiative Specification (SMI-S).
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand a detailed example of the implementation of storage virtualization 2. Understand the management techniques necessary to effectively control virtualized storage 3. Increase awareness of the impact of virtualized storage on other aspects of computation (especially virtual servers) and networking
Speaker - Rob Peglar, Vice President, Technology, Xiotech Corporation Rob Peglar is Vice President, Technology for Xiotech Corporation. A 31-year industry veteran and published author, he leads the shaping of strategic vision, emerging technologies, defining future offering portfolios including business and technology requirements, product planning and industry/customer liaison. He is a member of the SNIA Board of Directors, serves as Chair of the SNIA Tutorials, as a Board member of the Green Storage Initiative, and as Secretary/Treasurer of the Blade Systems Alliance. He has extensive experience in storage virtualization, the architecture of large heterogeneous SANs, replication and archiving strategy, disaster avoidance and compliance, information risk management, distributed cluster storage architectures and is a sought-after speaker and panelist at leading storage and networking-related seminars and conferences worldwide. Prior to joining Xiotech in August 2000, Mr. Peglar held key technology specialist and engineering management positions over a nine-year period at StorageTek and at their networking subsidiary, Network Systems Corporation. Prior to StorageTek, he held engineering development and product management positions at Control Data Corporation and its supercomputer division, ETA Systems. Mr. Peglar holds the B.S. degree in Computer Science from Washington University, St. Louis Missouri, and performed graduate work at Washington University's Sever Institute of Engineering. His research background includes I/O performance analysis, queuing theory, parallel systems architecture and OS design, storage networking protocols, clustering algorithms and virtual systems optimization.
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| 11:30 am–12:30 pm |
Conference Sessions
Information Compliance: Classification, Archiving and eDiscovery Compliance and eDiscovery are two of the biggest challenges facing IT today. Information continues to grow exponentially - and with it - the need to comply with industry and government regulations and prepare for eDiscovery while keeping costs down. This session will discuss the situation in which many companies today find themselves—trying to reconcile records management, compliance and governance requirements and manage to these requirements with tools that are available today. In particular, it will look at classification, archiving and retention policy management to proactively address compliance, and as tools to treat eDiscovery requests as a repeatable business processes.
Speaker - Sheila Childs, Director of Marketing, EMC Sheila Childs Director, Software Product Marketing EMC Information Management Software Group Sheila Childs is a Director of Marketing in EMC?s Content Management Software Group, a worldwide leader in the development and delivery of enterprise content management and archiving solutions. Sheila has held technical and management positions in product strategy, product development, product management and customer support/services. She has delivered value-focused storage management software for backup/recovery, HSM, remote device access, device and media management, SAN management and most recently, Information Lifecycle Management (ILM). Sheila has been involved with the Storage Networking Industry Association as a participant in technical working groups, on various committees and as a Board member. She co-chaired the Interoperability Committee from 1999-2001, which has brought successful interoperability demos to a number of Storage Networking World conferences, and initiated the SNIA-Conformance Test Program (SNIA-CTP). She has been active in many initiatives including the startup of the Technology Center and the SNIA Storage Management Initiative. She has been a member of the Board of Directors for four years; her elected positions include a year as Vice Chair and two years as Chairman. She chaired the SNIA Data Management Forum in 2005.
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| 2:45 pm–3:45 pm |
Conference Sessions
Innovations in Storage NetworkingThis is an exciting time in the field of Storage and Storage Networking. The advances in disk technologies with the move to integrate Solid State Disks with Hard Disk Drives are being brought to RAID controllers. The blending of storage, server and network Virtualization brings greater flexibility and asset utilization for customers and their IT infrastructure. The increasing performance potential in the storage network with advances in PCI Express, InfiniBand, IP SANS and the Fibre Channel over Ethernet initiatives continue to push the envelope of innovation. The concept of a Unified Data Center fabric promise reductions in cost and increases in performance for the future. A panel of storage and storage networking vendors will be on hand to answer questions and present the merits of their offerings, how they are approaching innovation and what the future holds.
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| 4:00 pm–5:00 pm |
Conference Sessions
"Green" Storage The next few years will bring widespread awareness of the environment's impact—especially energy costs—associated with data storage. Already several regulations and initiatives—for example, restriction of hazardous substances (ROHS), waste from electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) and Energy Star—affect manufacturers of storage components or computers. There are also some innovative storage technologies especially targeted towards energy conservation including a massive array of idle disks (MAID), along with the well-known alternatives of removable storage like tape and optical. Several vendors have also begun to offer data on power use, energy consumption and cooling loads in response to competitive pressures from other vendors and customers. Some vendors and consultants are offering energy modeling as part of their total cost of ownership (TCO) analysis, either for competitive reasons or as part of their professional services portfolio. This presentation will quickly review basic engineering topics relevant to understanding "Green," including stuff you may have successfully avoided, such as environmental chemistry; thermodynamics; energy vs. power; and computational and storage density, as well as the resulting energy and cooling issues. Conceptual models sufficient to understand or even develop energy budgets will be taught. All of this will converge on a basic model for TCO that includes energy modeling. This session has been brought to you by the SNIA Green Storage Initiative.
Speaker - SW Worth, Senior Standards Program Manager, Microsoft
| | Wednesday, May 20 |
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| 10:15 am–11:15 am |
Conference Sessions
A Crash Course in Data ReplicationReplicating data over a WAN sounds pretty straight-forward, but it turns out that there are literally dozens of different approaches, each with it's own pros and cons. Which approach is the best? Well, that depends on a wide variety of factors! This class is a fast-paced crash course in the various ways in which data can be replicated, and the pros and cons of each major approach. We trace the data path from applications to disk drives and examine all of the points along the way wherein replication logic can be inserted. We look at host based replication (application, database, file system, volume level, and hybrids), SAN replication (disk arrays, virtualization appliances, caching appliances, and storage switches), and backup system replication (block level incremental backup, CDP, and de-duplication). This class is not only the fastest way to understand replication technology it also serves as a foundation for understanding the latest storage virtualization techniques.
Speaker - Jacob Farmer, CTO, Cambridge Computer Services
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| 11:30 am–12:30 pm |
Conference Sessions
Data De-Duplication Deduplication technology has changed the economics of storage. With the massive amount of backup data increasing, deduplication allows for an efficient way of storing data. In this session, we'll differentiate de-duplication from other storage techniques. We'll also examine the different approaches to deduplication, including in-line vs. post-process de-duplication systems and central processing unit (CPU) vs. disk-spindle centric systems. Further, we'll discuss the state of the industry and its importance to the overall storage networking puzzle specifically, and what problems de-duplication can and cannot solve.
Speaker - Viet Phan, Senior Course Developer, DataDomain
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| 2:00 pm–3:00 pm |
Conference Sessions
Benefits and Impact of Technology Convergence in SAN IT organizations are under increasing pressure to meet highly demanding business priorities, while dealing with day-to-day operational limitations. Technologies, such as virtualization and Unified Fabric, offer a great opportunity for IT leader to improve the responsiveness and agility of their organizations. Nonetheless, the evolutionary path to full adoption of these converged technologies in the data center involves changes to IT processes, network architecture, as well as the skill set required to support the new IT. As unified fabric architectures evolve, the network will be the storage area network (SAN) for block or file access. This creates new opportunities for further storage consolidation and network architecture optimization. This session will explore the business benefits of unified fabric with fibre channel over Ethernet (FCoE) on the SAN and the network architecture implications. This session will also discuss the business benefits of converged technologies in IT, with a particular focus to the data center, and highlight some of the implications that these technologies will have on processes and people within IT.
Speaker - Errol Roberts, Distinguished Systems Engineer , Cisco With more than 16 years of networking, and telecommunications experience, Errol Roberts brings a practical understanding of how technology can solve business problems.
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| 3:15 pm–4:15 pm |
Conference Sessions
Best Practices for Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Business Continuity (BC) and Disaster Recovery (DR) practices go hand-in-hand. Likewise, both the BC and DR solutions you choose must closely align with the needs of your business. To meet these requirements and satisfy your organization's tolerance for downtime and data loss, you need to implement a recovery strategy based on a variety of data protection approaches. Today, because 24/7/365 access is expected, a range of data recovery capabilities are needed to map to all of your organization's recovery objectives. During this presentation we discuss best practices of a tiered BC/DR platform that integrates modular products such as CDP, replication and automated failover capabilities with traditional backup and recovery for multi-layered protection. Attendees will walk away with an understanding of top five best practices to consider and key items/actions to include in the development of their BC/DR plans.
Speaker - Frank Jablonski, Sr. Director, Recovery Management & Data Modeling Business Unit, CA
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