|
CONSULTANCY / CASE STUDIES
Digital processing fuels storage need for SMB
SLI-Consulting finds an answer for Digital Pictures
By Denise Murray
The storage needs of video and postproduction house. Digital Pictures (DP), increased to almost unmanageable levels with the migration of traditional film and videotape to digital format. The company has about 120 people in Melbourne and about 90 in Sydney.
More
SLI-C wins redesign contract for massive Korean ISP network
Local
networking consultant to play major role in proposed SAN rollout
By
Richard Noone/IDG
SYDNEY Australian based network consulting firm SLI-Consulting has been brought in to redesign and benchmark stage two of what is being touted as the largest Win 2000 storage area network rollout in the world.
One
of South Korea’s largest ISP’s Thrunet, servicing over
three million subscribers, was looking to deploy a new domain, Korea.com,
with the initial installation comprising 120 clustered 8-way Compaq
ProLiant servers with 31TB of multi-level RAID SAN storage to service
five million potential subscribers.
Working with vendors Compaq, LG Hitachi, EMC and Korean distributor NCG, SLI was called in to heavily redesign the storage, switching and server-farm components of the network, according to Jose Goldmann, senior IT&T consultant for SLI-Consulting.
According
to Goldmann, Korea Thrunet “wasn’t so confident in the
beginning” that the network would be able to stand up in the
real-world environment. Having partnered with LG Electronics in the
past, SLI was invited to present its case, to which the Korea Thrunet
officials were “quite impressed with our experience”,
claimed Goldmann.
In
addition to managing the benchmark test of the $US25 million network,
SLI realised significant savings for the ISP through its layout and
infrastructure redesign. “It could be said that we nearly cut
the investment in half,” Goldmann said.
For
example, SLI reportedly shaved $7 million, or 45 percent, off the
deployment of the server farm. And, according to Goldmann, the investment
in SLI’s consulting services from Korea Thrunet was “peanuts”
compared to what the ISP saved as a result.
One
of the key issues SLI faced was the 24-hour total crash retrieval
requirement placed on the network by Thrunet, an issue Goldmann claims
was “very challenging”.
Set to go live in September, the network is the largest project SLI has been involved with to date. And is expected to grow to 520 servers with 200 TB of SAN storage for 20 million subscribers, by the end of next year.
To SLI’s credit, Goldmann claims the deployment is to be presented at the IBC Storage Networking Conference in Sydney on October 16, 2000.
|