BlueArc: Difference between revisions
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'''BlueArc Corporation''' is an |
'''BlueArc Corporation''' is an American computer 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 [[United Kingdom]], BlueArc transitioned its HQ to the US ([[Mountain View, California]]) in 2000 and became a US corporation at that time. It maintained an 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 was acquired by [[Hitachi Data Systems]] on September 7, 2011.<ref>[http://www.hds.com/corporate/press-analyst-center/press-releases/2011/gl110907.html Hitachi Data Systems Announces Acquisition of BlueArc]</ref> |
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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 [[storage area network]] connected storage. The product line included the low-end 1000 series, midrange 2000 series and high-end 3000 series. |
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 [[storage area network]] connected storage. The product line included the low-end 1000 series, midrange 2000 series and high-end 3000 series. |
Revision as of 22:55, 1 February 2014
This article contains promotional content. (April 2009) |
Company type | Subsidiary of Hitachi, Ltd. |
---|---|
Industry | Data storage devices |
Founded | 1998 |
Headquarters | San Jose, California |
Key people | Mike Gustafson, president and CEO |
Products | Titan 1100, 2100, 2200, 2500, 3100 and 3200 |
Parent | Hitachi Data Systems |
Website | www |
BlueArc Corporation is an American computer 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 United Kingdom, BlueArc transitioned its HQ to the US (Mountain View, California) in 2000 and became a US corporation at that time. It maintained an engineering facility in England. The company moved to San Jose in July 2001.[2] BlueArc was acquired by Hitachi Data Systems on September 7, 2011.[3]
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 storage area network connected storage. The product line included the low-end 1000 series, midrange 2000 series and high-end 3000 series.
BlueArc competes with offerings from companies such as EMC Corporation, NetApp, Sun Microsystems and smaller companies including Isilon. The company distributed its products on a direct basis, through third-party resellers, and by OEM partners, including a 5-year global agreement with Hitachi Data Systems.[4] BlueArc's products can be clustered together into groups of up to 8 nodes. Some competing systems from Isilon, and NetApp offer similar clustering capabilities.
BlueArc's hardware is implemented on field-programmable gate array (FPGA) technology. BlueArc announced a record for single system and dual system performance on SPECsfs, an Network File System (NFS) test provided by the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation, in June 2008.[5][6]
On September 7, 2011, BlueArc was acquired by Hitachi Data Systems (HDS).[7]
References
- ^ BBC News - Web Without the Waiting
- ^ BlueArc Announces New Corporate Headquarters in San Jose, Calif.
- ^ Hitachi Data Systems Announces Acquisition of BlueArc
- ^ HDS, BlueArc in Big NAS Deal
- ^ All SPEC SFS97_R1 Results
- ^ "BlueArc Titan 3200 Storage System Sets New Record for Network Storage Performance". Press release. BlueArc. June 17, 2008. Archived from the original on December 3, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
{{cite news}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Hitachi Data Systems Announces Acquisition of BlueArc". Hitachi Data Systems Corporation. 2011-09-07. Retrieved 2011-09-08.