To advertise, contact
Nathalie Akl
+971 4 2108520
nathalie.akl@itp.com
بالعربية
Where am I? Home /


BREAKING NEWS :

Making space

By Sean Robson on Sunday, September 14, 2008

Many large enterprises are proving more receptive to the idea of strategic planning. - Omar Dajani, senior manager, systems engineering at Symantec.

Many large enterprises are proving more receptive to the idea of strategic planning. - Omar Dajani, senior manager, systems engineering at Symantec.

As information storage becomes more critical to organisations, IT managers are rising to the complex task with solutions and innovative practices.

The Middle East is a region where explosive growth is almost a given and nowhere is this more apparent than in the data that is being created in the enterprise space.

IT managers, already under fire from all angles, are staring the issue of storage in the datacentre right in the face and they dare not blink. A host of new technologies and solutions are at hand, but before they begin acquiring and implementing them they will need to take a close look at their current circumstances.

 

Virtualisation is very important for the region as it provides much needed space and data can be easily replicated for disaster recovery. The technology also enables data to be centrally managed.

"We need to examine things from two separate views, in terms of new datacentres and then in terms of existing datacentres. Previously the attitude had generally been one of acquiring a lot of space, purchasing servers and storage, installing the apps and seeing what happened. However, many large enterprises are proving more receptive to the idea of strategic planning," says Omar Dajani, senior manager, systems engineering at Symantec.

Nevertheless, Dajani continues to observe enterprises that still struggle with planning for capacity requirements and fail to anticipate the large amounts of data that they would be required to store or the rate at which the data increases.

Story continues below
advertisement



Tony Ward, general manager and sales director MENA and Turkey, Hitachi Data Systems agrees in part with Dajani. "Its improving as Middle East enterprises begin to invest in upgrading and developing the storage systems within their datacentres. CIOs are recognising the need for advanced storage solutions."

Although vendors are uniquely placed to influence the storage environments of the region, it is the CIOs and IT managers who are on the front lines of the battle to manage data.

"It's obvious that robust storage is critical to any organisation. The exploding growth and increasing compliance requirements are big challenges. An added challenge is the cost of connectivity in the region. The high cost makes it very expensive for your average organisation to back-up online or mirror its data to a disaster recovery site," says Bassem Aboukhater, regional IT director, Leo Burnett.

"We are being faced with growing data sizes and the failure of businesses to predict and inform IT departments about the data type, usage and the size they will have to cope with. Storage manufacturers are also changing the roadmap for the support of disk enclosures and supported disk types, which is creating yet another problem," weighs in Sujin Balakumaran, IT manager at Waha Capital in Abu Dhabi.

The status quo

Users are making the most of the plethora of choices now available to them, as the battle for storage intensifies in the region.

"We've recently implemented Symantec Net Backup and Enterprise Vault, which are helping us tremendously with policy based archiving and as an integrated back-up solution. De-duplication keeps the utilisation rate high. I also make use of iSCSI for a handful of SAN connected servers," describes Aboukhater.

"We have moved to centralise our storage solution in the datacentre for our own enterprise use. We use a Hitachi network solution for our Linux environment and an HP solution for the enterprise environment," says Mohammed Sabunchi, director of IT infrastructure, Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC).




User Comments

All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ITP.net reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
( Remmber Me )
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Security Code * Code
 


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.
Subscribe

Network Middle East English edition


The Middle East's leading monthly magazine for network professionals.

Subscription Rates:
FREE for GCC Countries, Egypt, Jordan & Lebanon *

AED 249.00 for International

Subscribe Now »

* Terms & Conditions Apply

Current Issue  |  Media Info  |  Subscribe to other Magazines »

Related Comment

What benefit is there in retailers and distributors working with smaller vendors? Channel Middle East recently hosted a ... 

Related Feature

Cable capers

Networks

Copper has held the status quo position for a long time when it comes to cabling. However, over the last few years fibre has... 

Related Feature

Coming together

Networks

Firms upgrade hardware and software but don't upgrade their most valuable asset, people.  


Competitions

Win this PCI-E Graphics Beast

Ends On Monday, 15 December 2008

If you’ve got an older rig with a low wattage power supply and need some extra graphics grunt, this is just the competition for you; we’ve got one of Palit’s GeForce 9600GSO Sonic graphics cards...


Advertising Features


Latest Products
Thermaltake V14 Pro

Hardware | Components | December 2008

Ready to take on water cooling kits.

RATING


Patriot SSD Warp 64GB

Hardware | Storage | December 2008

Ready for warp speed.

RATING


Gears of War 2

Games | Console | December 2008

Get ready for an overdose of action.

RATING


Sony VAIO VGN-Z12GN

Hardware | Notebooks | November 2008

Portable and powerful but can you live with it?

RATING


Technology Jobs
IT Support Senior Engineer
Location: Qatar, Qatar
Territory Sales Manager
Location: Dubai, UAE
Graphic Designer
Location: Dubai, UAE
Implementation Engineers
Location: Dubai, UAE

For editorial enquiries contact
Mark Sutton
mark.sutton
@itp.com
To advertise, contact
Ahmad Bashour
+971 4 210 8549
or ahmad.bashour
@itp.com


Arabian Computer News Channel Middle East Channel Middle East - Arabic Charged CommsMEA Network Middle East Windows Middle East Windows Middle East - Arabic ALL ITP TITLES