Small Tree Titanium16 in Indonesian Boutique Post-Production Prodigi House
32TB of storage and six 10GbE cards
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on May 27, 2013 at 2:56 pmOriginally founded in 2012 to handle post-production on two feature film projects, Prodigi House in Jakarta, Indonesia, soon acquired additional clients – including Samsung and Honda – seeking support with TV commercials.
With additional projects and tighter deadlines, the company installed a Titanium16 shared storage system from Small Tree Communications, LLC, the leader in Ethernet-based shared storage solutions for professionals engaging in the creation, management and delivery of electronic media and entertainment content.
Featuring suites for offline and online editing, color grading and motion graphics, Prodigi House needed a centralized storage system with enough capacity, to allow the editing team to work on feature films and TV commercial projects simultaneously. Using Small Tree’s Titanium16, featuring 32TB of storage, and six 10GbE cards, Prodigi House’s editors are able to access media files quickly and easily from anywhere in the facility without experiencing the typical delays associated with multiple users accessing the storage server at the same time.
As a start-up company, one of the greatest benefits of using Small Tree’s robust shared storage technology for Prodigi House was affordability.
"Titanium gives us a solid, dependable and affordable system that we can trust without sacrificing performance," said Tijoe Yauw Leng (a.k.a. Oleng), technical director for the Indonesia-based company. "Given the short time and tight budget we had, Small Tree’s easy-to-install, cost-friendly system was the ideal solution for Prodigi House."
Utilizing industry applications such as Final Cut Pro, Final Cut Studio 3, Adobe Creative Suite 6, FilmLight Baselight and Smoke Advanced Linux across the studio’s Mac Pro and iMac workstations, Prodigi House looked to Small Tree for its expertise with Mac 10Gb Ethernet networks. With an eye toward the future, the company was interested in a scalable storage solution that would grow along with them.
"With the immediate growth we experienced, we needed to know that we could upgrade the storage and add more workstations to handle more projects," Oleng continued. "The ease in which storage can be added to the Titanium system played a substantial part in our decision to move forward with Small Tree. We know that we can add drives at any time to the Titanium to provide our editors with the storage capacity they need to complete client projects."