A friend pointed me to a Wired piece on Longaccess, a new endowed data service for archiving personal files. Below the fold I look at their numbers.
I'm David Rosenthal, and this is a place to discuss the work I'm doing in Digital Preservation.
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Monday, April 21, 2014
Skeptical about emulation?
If you're skeptical about two trends I've been pointing to, the rapid rise of emulation technology, and the evolution of the Web's language from HTML to Javascript, you need to watch Gary Bernhardt's video that fell through a time-warp from 2035.
Also, at the recent EverCloud workshop Mahadev Satyanarayanan, my colleague from the long-gone days of the Andrew Project, gave an impressive live demo of C-MU's Olive emulation technology. The most impressive part was that the emulations started almost instantly, despite that fact that they were demand-paging over the hotel's not super-fast Internet.
Also, at the recent EverCloud workshop Mahadev Satyanarayanan, my colleague from the long-gone days of the Andrew Project, gave an impressive live demo of C-MU's Olive emulation technology. The most impressive part was that the emulations started almost instantly, despite that fact that they were demand-paging over the hotel's not super-fast Internet.
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Henry Newman on HD vs. SSD Economics
Henry Newman has an excellent post entitled SSD vs. HDD Pricing: Seven Myths That Need Correcting. His seven myths are:
- First, some assume that the price of MLC NAND flash will continue to decrease at a rapid and predictable rate that will make it competitive with HDDs for bandwidth, and nearly for capacity, by 2014 or 2015. This downward trend, it is assumed, will make flash a viable alternative for large storage and to act as a memory or “buffer” to improve performance.
- Second, there is a general assumption that prices for bandwidth ($/GB/s) for SSDs is much lower than for HDDs, and that enterprises will measure costs in these terms instead of capacity.
- Third, there is no distinction made between flash in general, such as consumer SSDs, and enterprise storage SSDs. It is assumed that MLC NAND will not only reduce in price ($/GB) but also that it will increase in density and larger capacity drives will be developed.
- Fourth, it is assumed that the quality of MLC NAND will either remain constant or increase as prices decrease and densities increase, allowing it to improve not only performance, but also reliability and power consumption of the systems it is used in.
- Fifth, it is assumed that power consumption for SSDs is, or will shortly be, significantly lower than that of HDDs overall, on a per GB basis and on a per GB/s basis.
- Sixth, they assume disk performance will grow at a constant rate of about 20 percent per generation and not improve.
- Seventh, they assume file system data layout will not improve to allow better disk utilization.
- Flash can do everything that hard disk can, but there are many markets where hard disk cannot do what flash can do.
- The supply of both flash and hard disk is constrained. Flash is constrained because investing in new flash fabs would not be profitable, especially given the obviously limited scope for shrinking flash cells. Hard disk is constrained because the market is effectively a duopoly, and both players are struggling to transition from the current PMR technology to HAMR.
- Thus flash will command a premium over hard disk prices so that the market directs the limited supply of flash to those applications, such as tablets, smartphones, and high-performance servers, where its added value is highest.
Monday, April 7, 2014
What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
I gave a talk at UC Berkeley's Swarm Lab entitled "What Could Possibly Go Wrong?" It was an initial attempt to summarize for non-preservationistas what we have learnt so far about the problem of preserving digital information for the long term in the more than 15 years of the LOCKSS Program. Follow me below the fold for an edited text with links to the sources.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
EverCloud workshop
I was invited to a workshop sponsored by ISAT/DARPA entitled The EverCloud: Anticipating and Countering Cloud-Rot that arose from Yale's EverCloud project. I gave a brief statement on an initial panel; an edited text with links to the sources is below the fold.