I dream of data reduction


jeannie

Data is growing at a dizzying rate. We need only look at our home computers to get a sense of how easy it is to fill our hard drives to overflowing with all manner of flotsam and jetsam. From family photos to LOLcats to videos of our kids, we’re finding it difficult if not impossible to keep down the rising tide of files.

There is a cost to this, as many if not most enterprises are now recognizing. Recently, InfoWorld launched a special section, Data Explosion that guides companies through the myriad problems that arise from having too much data to handle. With headlines like: “The big data addiction,” the new section promises to address the issue with step-by-step guides, white papers, and other instructional pieces.

Infoworld blogger Matt Prigge delves into the topic in a post today, “The high cost of lazy storage.” He says that users need to take responsibility for keeping their data under control. Despite this admonishment, he admits that he himself is an “excellent example of the problem.” He saves all of his email, because he never knows what he might need later. Sound familiar? If someone whose blog is called “Information Overload” can’t get control of his personal data, it’s hard to imagine how anyone else can.

Prigge writes, “The bigger that data gets, the more effort required to put the genie back in the bottle.” He pushes the metaphor even further (and more gruesomely) by suggesting that at some point it’s easier to kill the genie and throw away the bottle. Now, that does strike us here at Online Sto Op as rather extreme. Why not simply put the genie back into that nice, compact bottle where she was living perfectly happily for so many years?

As we all know from 70s TV, those bottles were well-upholstered and downright comfortable living spaces for many a genie. And while it’s true that some genies (or Jeannies) would get so angry they’d stomp their feet when they were magically sent back there, they eventually settled back onto the purple pillows, kicked off their metallic platform heels, dug their toes into the shag carpeting and relaxed. Same goes for data reduction. A combination of approaches seems the most sensible answer. Data needs to be managed. There is something that is known as 100% compression–it’s called “deletion.” But short of that, there are ways to reduce data by as much as 90%. There are solutions for reducing the types of files that are driving the fastest storage growth, such as JPEGs, documents, videos, graphics, and other large files. An intelligent, content aware approaches that includes both deduplication and compression is what this blog’s parent Ocarina provides.

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About Sunshine

Sunshine Mugrabi is a technology writer, editor, and blogger.

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