CW Developer Network
Recent Posts
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Nutanix adds HPE sauce to hybrid multi-cloud combos
10 Jun 2021 -
The ephemeral composable stack (series): Into the ether with cloud
08 Jun 2021 -
Panasas on data architecture - filesystem finesse in the CS Wild West
07 Jun 2021
As we know, Hewlett Packard became HP… and then, once the earth cooled, HP became HP Inc and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE). While HP Inc continued to sell ink (pun intended) inside its printer ...
It was somewhere around a decade ago that Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst (now president at IBM as he is) used the composability term as a hook for his keynote. “I want to talk to you about the era of ...
This is a guest post for the Computer Weekly Developer Network written by Curtis Anderson in his capacity as senior software architect at Panasas -- a company known for its PanFS parallel file ...
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Panasas on data architecture - haystacks & hammers, choose your poison
06 Jun 2021 -
Computational Storage - VAST Data: Practical truths for pragmatic file systems
04 Jun 2021 -
Computational Storage: Druva CTO - Models, tools & business rules
03 Jun 2021 -
Computational storage: University of Edinburgh - Antonio Barbalace at the CSD coalface
02 Jun 2021 -
Computational storage: OctoML - A tale of two workloads
01 Jun 2021 -
Computational storage: NGD Systems / SNIA - Icebergs at the Edge
31 May 2021 -
Computational storage: Pure Storage - Segment, sandbox, stream & shape for storage supremacy
27 May 2021
This is a guest post for the Computer Weekly Developer Network written by Curtis Anderson in his capacity as senior software architect at Panasas -- a company known for its PanFS parallel file ...
In a number of follow-up pieces to the Computer Weekly Developer Network (CWDN) series focusing on Computational Storage, CWDN continues the thread with some extended analysis in this space. The ...
In a number of follow-up pieces to the Computer Weekly Developer Network (CWDN) series focusing on Computational Storage, CWDN continues the thread with some extended analysis in this space. The ...
In a number of follow-up pieces to the Computer Weekly Developer Network (CWDN) series focusing on Computational Storage, CWDN continues the thread with some extended analysis in this space. The ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
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Computational storage series: Prizsm - The conventional-quantum chasm & stifling standardisation
26 May 2021 -
Computational storage series: Prizsm - Data disaggregation & ‘likable’ latency
25 May 2021 -
Threading new seams into the ‘empowered’ data fabric
24 May 2021 -
Computational storage series: Evaluator Group - Speculations, expectations & extrapolations
24 May 2021 -
Computational storage series: Model9 - The cloud + computational storage sweet spot
20 May 2021
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
Connect, unify & predict. You can almost smell the cellophane wrapping on the technology conference T-shirts as every vendor worth its salt emblazons its give-aways with phases like this. ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
Software runs on data and data is often regarded as the new oil. So it makes sense to put data as close to where it is being processed as possible, in order to reduce latency for performance-hungry ...
