Interop is always fertile turf for Network Computing editors.
But with most major networking vendors releasing or upgrading a
product of some kind, grabbing our attention is hardly easy. Yet
when I chatted with NWC tech editor Steven Hill about his Interop
schedule, I knew we had a hot story—literally.
What got my attention was the maniacal glee in Steve’s voice
as he described his dream product demo. “It’s just
super, Dave,” he rasped to me over the phone. “IoSafe
is going to take us out to the desert, where we’re going to
ignite one of its NAS drives and then see if we can read the data
off of it.” I could just picture Steve rubbing his hands
together and cackling at the mere thought of lighting up a NAS
drive. No need for telepresence. (To see what a NAS drive looks
like at 1,700 degrees Fahrenheit, go to nwc.com/go/fire-demo.)
Ruggedized gear isn’t news; we’ve seen such equipment
from a slew of vendors over the years. Themis, for example, makes a
ruggedized enterprise server that the company claims can weather
temperatures to 50 degrees Celsius (that’s 122 degrees
Fahrenheit) and withstand shock loads of more than 20Gs. Perfect
for when those 12-year-olds show up for ‘take your kid to
work day’ and decide to use tower servers for tackling
practice.
TerraLogic has the perfect solution for those morning klutzes who
are apt to spill their coffee on their computers. The Toughnote
Series M waterproof laptops sport rubber corners and covers for
each port to stop dust and water from damaging the innards. Sealed
hard-drive bays reportedly prevent water or dust from entering the
machine core, protecting the motherboard. Of course, the 2.5-inch
hard disk is shockmounted and waterproof.
Vendors of ruggedized gear rarely let us test their equipment by
dipping it into a tub of water or throwing it out a second-story
window (one PR person blanched at that idea when we suggested it
was necessary to see if claims about the company’s handheld
being shockproof were true). So letting Steve Hill torch this
system shows some confidence, but just as impressive are the
down-to-earth implications for this sort of equipment.
While applications for survivable gear have always tended toward
the exotic—Delta Force setting up a covert, ad hoc network in
sand-strewn Iranian territory, or ExxonMobil maintaining an oil rig
100 miles north of the Alaskan coast—mundane applications
have been few and far between. Increasingly though, this sort of
gear has seen application in the mainstream business and even
consumer markets.
It’s no secret that a big portion of IT spending is on
business continuity, and hence off-site storage. Instead of paying
for remote storage, on the one hand, or incurring the risk of
backing up to run-of-the-mill onsite tape, ruggedized NAS drives
let small and midsize businesses strike a compromise—saving
valuable documents onsite while still protecting the media against
destruction. IoSafe claims its R4 NAS is resistant to fire, water
and building collapse.
Consumers, too, have a need for ruggedized equipment. With the
personal investment in videos, music, photos and documents, even
home users could benefit from fireproof or waterproof drives. Just
imagine your 14-year-old losing her Linkin Park collection. Could a
corporate disaster really be any worse for your mental health?
Disaster sites are rarely pretty. They’re, well, disasters.
It’s not sufficient then that equipment just survives floods
or roaring flames. It needs to be found as well amidst the
desolation and destruction implicit in these instances. GPS tags
are a must to help businesses locate their drives once the ashes
cool, or for consumers to find their drives when lost in their
teenagers’ rooms.