2005 Top Ten: Trends to Watch
Our look at the storage topics you can count on for 2005
December 30, 2004
As 2004 draws to a close, it's time to take a peek ahead -- even while we're still trying to digest the current year along with Grandma's cranberry pudding and Uncle Benny's eggnog punch (hiccup! blerrrrpp!).
Below is what we see shaping up as major storage networking themes in the months ahead. Do you agree? Hit that message board, not us!
No. 10: Funding Flush and Trickle
It was a banner year for funding, with at least 30 storage companies closing rounds for a total approaching $600 million, more than double the total for storage companies in 2003. Its unlikely that VCs will fork over as much this year, though. Most of the VC money spent in 2004 was on late rounds, like third or later. And most recipients hope they won’t need more. At least one startup won’t be back at the trough: Candera picked up $12 million in February, but closed its doors in December.
Funding stories from 2004 include:
News Analysis: Funding Cheer for Two
News Analysis: Candera's Closed
News Analysis: Storage Startups Top $500M
News Analysis: Acopia Aces $25M
News Analysis: Copan Sweeps Up $25M
News Analysis: Intransa Scores $25M
News Analysis: VCs Shell Out for Storage
News Analysis: IVivity Ingests $26M
News Analysis: 3PAR Pockets $32 Million
News Analysis: More Money for Maranti
News Analysis: Egenera Generates $30 Million
No. 9: IPO -- Yes or No?
There was a lot of IPO talk in 2004, with little action. Xyratex Ltd. (Nasdaq: XRTX) went public in June, but Engenio Information Technologies Inc. had second thoughts after pricing shares in July. Blade server startup Egenera Inc. also filed for an IPO but remains private. Other candidates for IPOs in 2005 include AppIQ Corp., BlueArc Corp., CommVault Systems Inc., EqualLogic Inc., and Xiotech Corp.
We don't think a lot of these will take the public plunge. We do think a few will, however -- enough to make the storage networking market one of 2005's most interesting.
News Analysis: Xiotech Ponders Public Path
News Analysis: AppIQ & Engenio Join for Software
News Analysis: CreekPath Reels In $22M
News Analysis: BlueArc Still Hot for IPO
News Analysis: PolyServe Lands $20M, Talks IPO
News Analysis: Xyratex Has No IPO Regrets
News Analysis: Engenio Gets Cold Feet
News Analysis: Egenera Seeks IPO
News Analysis: EqualLogic Scores $20M
News Analysis: Xyratex Files for IPO
News Analysis: CommVault 'Well Positioned' for IPO
No. 8: A 4-Gig Gaggle
Who’s ready for 4-gig storage gear? Vendors certainly are. This year was filled with demos of 4-gig switches, HBAs, chips, and controllers. The question is when will customers start demanding the higher speed? We expect that even if adoptions don't start to ramp up in 2005, consideration of higher-speed Fibre Channel will.
News Analysis: Emulex Goes 4-Gig
News Analysis: IBM Offers 4-Gig SAN Switch
News Analysis: HDS Resells Brocade Switch
News Analysis: Chips Dip Into Serial, 4-Gbit/s
News Analysis: Brocade & HP: Blade Brothers
News Analysis: ATTO Ships 4-Gig Adapters
News Analysis: Brocade First With 4-Gig, Last With CUP
News Analysis: LSI OEMs Sample 4-Gig HBA
News Analysis: Sandburst Upgrades Traffic Manager
News Analysis: McData Goes on Offensive
News Analysis: Agilent Boasts 4-Gig First
News Analysis: Report Looks Beyond 4-Gig
News Analysis: 4-Gig for Show
News Analysis: PMC-Sierra Touts 4-Gig Switches
No. 7: Serial Platforms -- Ready for Primetime
Serial ATA (SATA) drives saturated the market in 2004, and serial-attached SCSI (SAS) products are right around the corner, with shipments scheduled for the first quarter of 2005. IDC says serial-disk technology will bump the storage semiconductor market past $1 billion next year, and market research firm The Info Pro (TIP) says SATA drives are already the top storage spending priority.
News Analysis: Interoperability Lab Plugs SAS
News Analysis: Chips Dip Into Serial, 4-Gbit/s
News Analysis: IDC: Storage Looking Chipper
News Analysis: Survey: SATA, IP SANs Hot Priorities
News Analysis: Sierra Logic Ships SATA
News Analysis: Vendors Strut Their SAS
News Analysis: Mixed Drives in the Mix
News Analysis: Report: SATA & SAS to Share Systems
News Analysis: SATA Saturates SANs
News Analysis: Vitesse Talks Some SAS
News Analysis: Ario Hops SATA Train
No. 6: NAS Proliferation
Everybody’s getting into the NAS act as 2005 approaches. This year, SAN vendors Dell Computer Corp. (Nasdaq: DELL), EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC), IBM Corp. (NYSE: IBM), Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ), Network Appliance Inc. (Nasdaq: NTAP), Sun Microsystems Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW), and Xiotech made NAS news either with product refreshes or by jumping into the market. The roster of NAS startups also grew. We even saw wireless and home NAS devices pop up. As the year ends, we hear Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO) plans to get into NAS as well. It should be interesting to see how it all shakes out in 2005.
News Analysis: Cisco NAS Options Mulled
News Analysis: NeoPath Opens Up
News Analysis: NAS Evolution: The Insider Scoop
News Analysis: Storage Startups Top $500M
News Analysis: NetApp Freshens What's OnTap
News Analysis: Panasas: Lab Rat No More
News Analysis: Acopia Aces $25M
News Analysis: Storage Seeks NAS Appeal
News Analysis: Xiotech Launches New NAS
News Analysis: Wireless NAS Seeks a Niche
News Analysis: EMC Challenges NetApp NAS
News Analysis: IBM Turns a New NAS Leaf – Again
News Analysis: Adaptec's $100M Snap Decision
News Analysis: Storage Goes Home
News Analysis: Sun Sings New Storage Song
News Analysis: Iomega Adds to NAS Family
News Analysis: EMC Joins Rush to Windows NAS
News Analysis: Dell Covers Its NAS
No. 5: Disk Backup in the Forefront
Tape’s not dead, but it certainly isn’t thriving. Tape vendors Advanced Digital Information Corp. (Nasdaq: ADIC), Overland Storage Inc. (Nasdaq: OVRL), Quantum Corp. (NYSE: DSS), and Storage Technology Corp. (StorageTek) (NYSE: STK) keep beefing up their disk products, and startups such as Copan Systems Inc., Diligent Technologies Corp., and Sepaton are gaining traction. Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT) plans to enter the backup and recovery software arena in 2005. Seems like a hot zone.
News Analysis: Quantum Disk-Backup Sales Spike
News Analysis: Online Backup Booming
News Analysis: ADIC Upgrades Disk Backup
News Analysis: Diligent Pockets $22M
News Analysis: Microsoft's Recovery Plan
News Analysis: Copan Sweeps Up $25M
News Analysis: Avamar
News Analysis: New Enterprise Backup: Proceed With Caution
News Analysis: Tape Guys Look for Answers
News Analysis: Overland Drives Disk Harder
News Analysis: EMC and HP Spin Disk
News Analysis: Sepaton Backs Up Bank
News Analysis: ADIC Banks on Disk
News Analysis: Copan Takes Aim at Tape
News Analysis: StorageTek & Permabit Mingling
News Analysis: StorageTek Flexes Disk
No. 4: Storage Vendors Rethink Small
Just about everybody unveiled products for small and midrange companies in 2004, but few reported significant sales to SMBs. If SMB sales don’t pick up in 2005, storage marketing folks will have a lot of explaining to do to their bosses. We see the SMB trend continuing, but with some refinements to the "small is beautiful" message.
News Analysis: Hitachi Heads for SMB
News Analysis: Emulex Sticks With Fibre Channel
News Analysis: HP and QLogic Aim Low
News Analysis: McData Vets at Crosswalk
News Analysis: EMC Dances With Dantz
News Analysis: HP Adds Low-End NAS
News Analysis: Brocade & Emulex Shake Hands
News Analysis: IBM Slips iSCSI Into SAN
News Analysis: Small Is Beautiful
News Analysis: Report: SMBs Need SMStorage
News Analysis: Startups Look for SMB Feast
News Analysis: EMC, Dell Get Small With SATA
News Analysis: HP Aims to Dazzle SMBs
News Analysis: QLogic Stacks SMB Deck
No. 3: ILM in the Money
EMC is leading the drum-banging about ILM these days, joined by all of its competitors and most of the small hardware and software vendors. Indeed, being in the market means pitching your storage networking gear as ILM -- cheap disk, fixed content storage, and software designed to move information across media as it ages. Never mind that half the pieces are still missing. ILM talk will intensify in 2005:
News Analysis: Abrevity Launches
News Analysis: Nortel Banks on China
News Analysis: Report: Applications Key to ILM
News Analysis: HP Expands Tiered Storage
News Analysis: ILM: Edging Toward Reality
News Analysis: Xiotech Ponders Public Path
News Analysis: AppIQ & Engenio Join for Software
News Analysis: CommVault Recasts QiNetix
News Analysis: Research Center Grows Own ILM
News Analysis: Services Save StorageTek
News Analysis: Tucci Touts ILM
News Analysis: IBM’s ILM 30th Anniversary
News Analysis: CreekPath Reels In $22M
News Analysis: Hitachi Struts Mr. Universal
News Analysis: PolyServe Lands $20M, Talks IPO
News Analysis: Xyratex Files for IPO
No. 2: IP SANs Pick Up Steam
iSCSI made its mark this year and is poised for solid growth in 2005. The numbers tell the tale: IP SANs have been fertile ground for startups over the past few years, and EqualLogic Inc., Intransa Inc., and Sanrad picked up a combined $57 million in funding this year. But they’re not alone. NetApp is already off and running with iSCSI revenue, IBM jumped into the game this year, and EMC will make a splash next year. IDC forecasts the iSCSI market to reach $2.9 billion by 2008. NetApp CEO Dan Warmenhoven says it will grow even faster. A Byte and Switch poll in October found that 75 percent of the respondents were running IP SANs or planning to by the end of next year.
News Analysis: Rackable Serves iSCSI
News Analysis: NetApp Banks on iSCSI
News Analysis: Startups Look to iSCSI Surge
News Analysis: IP SANs Are Sizzling
News Analysis: IBM Slips iSCSI Into SAN
News Analysis: EqualLogic Scores $20M
News Analysis: Intransa Scores $25M
News Analysis: Nimbus Nips Into iSCSI
News Analysis: Terminator Pumps Sanrad
News Analysis: Sanrad Closes $8M Round
News Analysis: ISCSI Shakin' Goin' On
No. 1: Virtualization Battle Escalates
The great storage debate of 2004 centered around virtualization, and the disagreements will probably intensify in 2005 as EMC puts its storage router into play. Hitachi Data Systems (HDS) and IBM have already staked their claims to having the best storage virtualization technology. In 2005, we’ll see the major switch guys enter the fray along with switch, appliance, and intelligent software startups, especially as virtualization products gain more use for data replication.
News Analysis: Acopia Wins Leading Lights Award
News Analysis: Cisco Eyes SAN Startups
News Analysis: Nortel Gets New EDC Waiver
News Analysis: StorageTek Plans Virtualization Device
News Analysis: Hitachi, IBM Virtualize Each Other
News Analysis: Startups Abuzz Over Intelligence
News Analysis: EMC Takes Storage Router for a Spin
News Analysis: Troika Turns a Corner
News Analysis: Replication's All the Rage
News Analysis: IBM's New Shark Tale
News Analysis: Hitachi Struts Mr. Universal
News Analysis: Where Does the Intelligence Go?
News Analysis: Topspin Frames Virtualization
News Analysis: Incipient Looks to Deal
News Analysis: Report: Switch Is Best for Virtualization
— The Editors, Byte and Switch
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