Rackspace Debuts Open Source, SSD Cloud Storage Solution
Open source cloud computing solutions continued to expand with the announcement a new product from Rackspace (NYSE: RAX) based on the OpenStack platform. Notably, its key selling points include not only performance and storage standards that the company touts as industry leading, but also the uniquely open source trait of freedom from vendor lock-in.
Open source cloud computing solutions continued to expand with the announcement a new product from Rackspace (NYSE: RAX) based on the OpenStack platform. Notably, its key selling points include not only performance and storage standards that the company touts as industry leading, but also the uniquely open source trait of freedom from vendor lock-in. Here are the details on this new product, and what they say about the convergence of the cloud and open source.
Called Cloud Block Storage, the new Rackspace platform debuted Oct. 23, 2012. It is designed, according to company representatives, "for customers that typically require large amounts of everyday storage" that can be expanded as needed.
Cloud Block Storage Details
The specific features of the new product include:
Flexible storage attachment options, with support for attaching block storage volumes of up to 1TB each, and easily detaching them or moving them between different nodes as needed.
An option to use solid state drives (SSD) for storage instead of standard hard drives, providing a major performance boost.
Pricing of 15 cents per month for each Gigabyte of data stored, or 70 cents for the SSD option.
Freedom from vendor lock-in. According to Rackspace: "Using the OpenStack Cinder APIs will allow customers to avoid proprietary implementation."
Playing Up Open Source Strengths
That last point is of particular interest from the open source perspective, since it highlights the unique advantage enjoyed by open source vendors as they build solutions for the cloud market. Anyone can offer flexibility, high performance and affordable pricing for cloud storage, but only vendors who have adopted open source infrastructures such as OpenStack can promise genuine protection for their customers against being locked in to proprietary systems.
Of course, freedom from lock-in may not matter much to all customers. But Rackspace clearly believes it is a major selling point — as it should be for anyone hoping to avoid repeating the mistakes made 15 years ago, when organizations bought into proprietary PC and server platforms whose legacy of lock-in remains problematic today.
SSD in the Cloud
Meanwhile, throwing an SSD option into the mix is also an interesting move. SSD technology traditionally has been associated mainly with PCs and especially laptops, where the drives have the benefit of better performance as well as resiliency against dropping and other physical damage.
So by bringing SSD technology into the cloud, Rackspace is trying something new. Whether customers will sign on for an option that costs more than 4.5 times as much as the standard package remains to be seen, but it's certainly an intriguing idea in its own right.
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