ie8 fix

Thunderbolt storage surprises at NAB '11

By | April 13, 2011, 8:38am PDT

Summary: Thunderbolt is off to a promising start at NAB ‘11. Vendor support and product range is greater than expected.

A high-performance storage interconnect is always welcome in bandwidth-gobbling video work. But the product range is greater than expected. It’s a promising start for Thunderbolt.

MacBooks to the enterprise
The biggest surprise is the Promise Technology SANlink, a Thunderbolt-to-Fibre Channel adapter. Breeze in from the field, plug into the SAN, and access all your organization’s digital assets in minutes.

LaCie
LaCie is showing several Thunderbolt products. The most interesting is their hard drive-based Little Big Disk, which houses 2 striped 500GB, 7200 rpm notebook drives. They showed 4 of them daisy-chained together with a total read bandwidth of 600 MB/s.

That’s enough to handle a couple of HD video streams. The 4 drives require external power as the MBP Thunderbolt interface is only 10 watts - enough to power 1 LBD but not 4.

The Thunderbolt demo is running continuously. While the tiny DisplayPort connector was warm, neither it or the MBP was noticeably hot.

LaCie expects to add Thunderbolt to most of its storage lineup as demand sorts itself out. Even people who don’t have Thunderbolt today may want to buy it to future-proof their investments.

G-Technology
Hitachi’s G-Technology prosumer unit is showing a simple proof-of-concept that ties an Intel Thunderbolt reference board to one of their PCIe SAS RAID controllers. They get over 600 MB/s out of this unoptimized proto.

Expect G-Tech Thunderbolt product in Q3/Q4.

Sonnet
Long-time Mac vendor Sonnet Technology is showing Thunderbolt products ranging from a compact 2-drive unit to an 8 drive RAID.

Promise
Promise is showing direct attach 4 and 8 drive RAID arrays in addition to the SANLink FC adapter.

The Storage Bits take
Thunderbolt is making a stronger showing with more vendor support and more customer interest - judging by the demo traffic - than I’d expected. Granted, the NAB video crowd is especially bandwidth hungry compared to civilians, but they also buy a lot of gear.

More vendors would have been showing protos, but Intel has limited the number of early developers it supports. The planned release of an Intel Thunderbolt developer’s kit later this quarter suggests that Intel is getting comfortable with Thunderbolt and expects to have answers for most new developer’s questions.

There’s a rumor that expected Thunderbolt iMacs will also be capable of acting as I/O hubs - FireWire, USB, DisplayPort, Ethernet and audio - for MacBook Pros. A nice thought, but as with all Apple futures, it remains to be seen.

Will consumers beyond the Mac faithful buy into Thunderbolt? That is up to Intel’s pricing strategy. Civilians like faster, but love cheaper. At the single hard drive level there won’t be a performance delta between USB3 and Thunderbolt, so consumers won’t pay much more.

Initial Thunderbolt products will have a noticeable uplift. It will be fast, not free. We’ll know more when products start arriving this summer.

Comments welcome, of course.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Robin Harris has been messing with computers for over 30 years and selling and marketing data storage for over 20 in companies large and small.

Disclosure

Robin Harris

Robin Harris is a president of TechnoQWAN, a consulting and analyst firm in northern Arizona. He also writes StorageMojo.com, a blog which accepts advertising from companies in the storage industry, and has a 25 year history with IT vendors. He has many industry contacts, many of whom are friends and all of whom he has opinions about. Robin has relationships with many companies in the technology industry. Every company he writes about may have sought to influence his opinion through carefully-crafted marketing messages and self-serving white papers, gifts ranging from desk calendars, t-shirts, lunches and trips as well as analyst or consulting assignments. He also invests in some technology companies. He may accept payment for services in stock as well. Robin discloses financial investments in or client relationships with companies named in Storage Bits. To help readers sort out the gold from the dross in his writings, Robin tries to communicate his reasons as clearly as he can. If you agree, you are intelligent and discerning. If you disagree, well, you disagree. In all cases, Robin encourages readers to subject everything they read, see or hear on the internet or from politicians to some simple questions: * What assumptions are implicit in the world view and judgments of the author? * What, if any, is the factual basis for the opinions the author expresses? * Is it reasonable, logical and clear? Your critical faculties: use ‘em or lose ‘em!

Biography

Robin Harris

Harris has been messing with computers for over 30 years and selling and marketing data storage for over 20 in companies large and small. He introduced a couple of multi-billion dollar storage products (DLT, the first Fibre Channel array) to market, as well as a many smaller ones. Earlier he spent 10 years marketing servers and networks. After leaving corporate life he founded TechnoQWAN, a consulting and analyst firm. He also developed StorageMojo into one of the top storage industry blogs.

Robin writes, consults, coaches and lives among the mountains of northern Arizona.

Related Discussions on TechRepublic

Did you know you can take part in these discussions with your ZDNet membership?
15
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: Thunderbolt storage surprises at NAB '11
FAULKNE 13th Oct
Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.
0 Votes
+ -
Thunderbolt Interface
ptyson@... 13th Apr 2011
Is this an Apple thing or is this an "open" technology for both Macs and PCs? From looking at the Apple website - they are making it sound like it is for Apple only and of course (like they always do) they're leading the reader to believe that they "invented" this technology themselves.
0 Votes
+ -
@ptyson@...

It is open, but only Apple has is right now.

I don't know what you were reading on the Apple website. Nowhere do they claim to have invented the Thunderbolt technology.

From Apple's website: "Thunderbolt began at Intel Labs with a simple concept: create an incredibly fast input/output technology that just about anything can plug into. "

Unless, of course, you read "Thunderbolt began at Intel Labs" to mean "invented by Apple."

From Intel's website: "Developed by Intel (under the code name Light Peak), and brought to market with technical collaboration from Apple. "
0 Votes
+ -
@msalzberg ...

Thunderbutt... Intel's new wet dream for control, control, control. Everyone knows that Intel is dragging its feet and inconveniencing consumers for Intel's own selfish scheme.

Maybe bribing some OEMs and Customers and REtailers will help to sell Thunderbutt?
0 Votes
+ -
@mgcguy

Are you suggesting that Intel no longer make chipsets? Isn't that what they're in business to do?
0 Votes
+ -
RE: Thunderbolt storage surprises at NAB '11
doug.pirie@... 14th Apr 2011
Think the folks at Apple who worked on the cancelled server products are even more ticked off now?
0 Votes
+ -
But what about data rot!!!....No answer? Thought not.
I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate! nccma cooler
0 Votes
+ -
I used to be more than happy to seek out this internet-site.I wanted to thanks in your time for this glorious read!! I positively enjoying each little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you weblog post. this thread is amazing i like your work and i appreciate you that you have share a useful stuff thanks for sharing the i shop abatwa
0 Votes
+ -
I used to be more than happy to seek out this internet-site.I wanted to thanks in your time for this glorious read!! I positively enjoying each little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you weblog post.Bookmarking now thanks please consider a follow up post. power sa shop
0 Votes
+ -
I think the representation of this article is actually superb one. This is my first visit to your site. Thanks a lot and keep sharing the information. Keep updating the information for all of us. Thanks ZDNet Government was launched as the brand's first industry vertical, with a mission to cater to IT professionals in the public secto I agree with your post. However, do you have any sources I can cite for my paper wheel car com bury
Well welcome, hopefully you can become a vital member of the community and really help to push far ahead of google. Which Im sure the development team would love. This will of course earn you alot points too and get you on the leaders board. z d n e t t h a n k Im not sure i come to an agreement with you on every level, howevor it absolutely was a good posting, many thanks for taking the time to put up your ideas.
Thanks nice info z d n e t I really liked your current article write more..let me add you to its favorite
I really enjoyed reading this post !!!have bookmarked w e b s will come back to read more.
0 Votes
+ -
Fantastic news about the new release.I positively enjoying each little bit of it and I have you b o o k m a r k e d to check out new stuff you weblog post.Im not sure i come to an agreement with you on every level, howevor it absolutely was a good posting, many thanks for taking the time to put up your ideas
Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix