BlueArc: Difference between revisions
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'''BlueArc Corporation''' is a network storage device manufacturer headquartered in [[San Jose, California]]. BlueArc was founded in 1998 by [[Geoff Barrall]]<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/sci_tech/1550365.stm BBC News - Web Without the Waiting]</ref>, Jeff Pinkham and Jon Meyer. Initially based in the UK, BlueArc transitioned its HQ to the US (Mountain View) in 2000 and became a US corporation at that time although still maintains a sizable engineering facility in England. The company moved to San Jose in July 2001<ref>[http://bluearc.com/html/news/press_releases/pr_headquarters_070201.shtml BlueArc Announces New Corporate Headquarters in San Jose, Calif.]</ref>. |
'''BlueArc Corporation''' is a network storage device manufacturer headquartered in [[San Jose, California]]. BlueArc was founded in 1998 by [[Geoff Barrall]]<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/sci_tech/1550365.stm BBC News - Web Without the Waiting]</ref>, Jeff Pinkham and Jon Meyer. Initially based in the UK, BlueArc transitioned its HQ to the US (Mountain View) in 2000 and became a US corporation at that time although still maintains a sizable engineering facility in England. The company moved to San Jose in July 2001<ref>[http://bluearc.com/html/news/press_releases/pr_headquarters_070201.shtml BlueArc Announces New Corporate Headquarters in San Jose, Calif.]</ref>. |
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BlueArc's products are network attached storage ([[Network- |
BlueArc's products are network attached storage ([[Network-attached storage|NAS]]) systems that are sold either as appliances bundled with storage, or as NAS heads supporting third party SAN connected storage. The current product line includes the low-end 1000 series, midrange 2000 series and high-end 3000 series. The products are differentiated by their performance, capacity and host port connectivity. |
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The primary differentiating feature of the BlueArc's NAS products in comparison to their competition is BlueArc's heavy reliance on [[FPGA]]'s, or field programmable gate arrays. The FPGA's provide hardware acceleration of processing which typically occurs in software running on general purpose CPU's on competing products. As a result, BlueArc is able to provide high performance for a single system or node. Another feature of BlueArc's products is their ability to be clustered together into groups of up to 8 nodes. Some competing systems from Isilon, and NetApp offer similar clustering capabilities. |
The primary differentiating feature of the BlueArc's NAS products in comparison to their competition is BlueArc's heavy reliance on [[FPGA]]'s, or field programmable gate arrays. The FPGA's provide hardware acceleration of processing which typically occurs in software running on general purpose CPU's on competing products. As a result, BlueArc is able to provide high performance for a single system or node. Another feature of BlueArc's products is their ability to be clustered together into groups of up to 8 nodes. Some competing systems from Isilon, and NetApp offer similar clustering capabilities. |
Revision as of 23:41, 24 December 2010
This article contains promotional content. (April 2009) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Data storage devices |
Founded | 1998 |
Headquarters | San Jose, California |
Key people | Mike Gustafson, President and CEO Rick Martig, CFO Shmuel Shottan, CTO Chris McBride, Sr.VP Global Customer Operations Bridget Warwick, VP Marketing Carlo Garbagnati, VP Engineering Robert Harvey, VP Operations |
Products | Titan 1100, 2100, 2200, 2500, 3100 and 3200 |
Website | www.bluearc.com |
BlueArc Corporation is a network storage device manufacturer headquartered in San Jose, California. BlueArc was founded in 1998 by Geoff Barrall[1], Jeff Pinkham and Jon Meyer. Initially based in the UK, BlueArc transitioned its HQ to the US (Mountain View) in 2000 and became a US corporation at that time although still maintains a sizable engineering facility in England. The company moved to San Jose in July 2001[2].
BlueArc's products are network attached storage (NAS) systems that are sold either as appliances bundled with storage, or as NAS heads supporting third party SAN connected storage. The current product line includes the low-end 1000 series, midrange 2000 series and high-end 3000 series. The products are differentiated by their performance, capacity and host port connectivity.
The primary differentiating feature of the BlueArc's NAS products in comparison to their competition is BlueArc's heavy reliance on FPGA's, or field programmable gate arrays. The FPGA's provide hardware acceleration of processing which typically occurs in software running on general purpose CPU's on competing products. As a result, BlueArc is able to provide high performance for a single system or node. Another feature of BlueArc's products is their ability to be clustered together into groups of up to 8 nodes. Some competing systems from Isilon, and NetApp offer similar clustering capabilities.
BlueArc competes with offerings from companies such as EMC, NetApp, Sun Microsystems and smaller companies including Isilon. The company distributes its products on a direct basis, through third-party resellers, and by OEM partners, including a 5-year global agreement with Hitachi Data Systems[3].
BlueArc's product line is differentiated through its hardware architecture, founded on FPGA technology. BlueArc holds the world record for single system and dual system performance on SPECsfs[4], an NFS test provided by SPEC.org[5].
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