IDC’s Top Ten Storage Predictions for 2008
Online storage service (SaaS) is the first one.
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on January 9, 2008 at 4:19 pmDemand for storage capacity continues to grow at a rate of nearly 60% per year and IDC believes that during 2008 the industry will see significant shifts in the way data is stored, managed, and protected. The overarching theme of storage efficiency will intensify throughout 2008 and increase the industry’s focus on virtualization strategies and green initiatives as well as information consolidation techniques like deduplication.
"In the past several years, storage trends have tended to be tactical and focused on developments in specific technologies," said Benjamin S. Woo, vice president, Enterprise Storage Systems at IDC. "2008 is likely to represent an inflection point in the way applications and storage will be interfaced."
Among IDC’s key predictions for 2008 are the following:
* Online storage services (storage-as-a-service) such as online backup, archiving, and replication will be accepted as a viable option.
* New role-based storage systems will enable vendors to target specific storage and data management issues, but will require tighter integration between the content-generating application and storage layer.
* Solid state disks will become more viable for mainstream storage solutions as a result of declining price points.
* Virtual servers (e.g., VMware) will emerge as the killer application for iSCSI.
* Vendors will create more attractive "all in one" solutions using an integrated server and storage approach to address the lucrative SMB market.
* Value-added storage services will begin to be divorced from storage subsystems,
resulting in further commoditization of storage subsystems.
* A growing number of enterprises will adopt full-disk encryption (FDE) into the
datacenter to fall within the safe harbor provisions of many compliance
regulations.
* Vendors will create more attractive "all in one" solutions using an integrated
server and storage approach to address the lucrative SMB market.
* Partial hardware refreshes that require nondisruptive expansions/replacements
will be demanded by customers to up the ante on "green" initiatives
* Deduplication, single instancing, VTL, and thin provision will become standard
options on storage systems to enable customers to become more "green."
IDC’s study, Worldwide Storage 2008 Top 10 Predictions: New Paradigms, discusses the technologies and market forces that will shape the storage industry in 2008.











