Thursday, March 29, 2012

Rennert Vogel Deploys DataCore's SANsymphony -V Storage Hypervisor

By Rahul Arora TMCnet Contributor

DataCore Software, a storage hypervisor and premier provider of storage virtualization software, recently announced its SANsymphony -V storage hypervisor has been deployed by Rennert Vogel Mandler & Rodriguez, P.A. (Rennert Vogel),  a Miami-based business law firm.

The solution has helped the company achieve high availability in its virtual environment, according to officials from Rennert Vogel in a press release. This next-generation storage virtualization software solution has also enabled the company to eliminate storage-related barriers preventing them from realizing the financial and operational goals of their virtualization projects.

“We often come into contact with people from larger law firms that have the cutting-edge systems and they are envious of our virtual infrastructure,” said Mike Ferguson, IT director for Rennert Vogel. “They learn about our HA, the centralized management, performance - even across Layer 2 transport – and are amazed at the benefits the SANsymphony-V storage hypervisor offers.”

SANsymphony -V storage hypervisor helps cost-effectively avoid the many performance problems caused by I/O bottlenecks, and the lost business suffered from downtime that make customers very hesitant to virtualize crucial business applications such as mail and databases systems.

SANsymphony-V uses adaptive caching and performance boosting techniques perfected over the past 10 years to absorb varying workloads while simultaneously removing storage as a single point of failure and disruption. The solution offers a flexible, open software platform from which to provision, share, reconfigure, migrate, replicate, expand and upgrade storage with no lag.

“The gains we have achieved by deploying DataCore technology to virtualize storage resources include increased reliability, performance and peace-of-mind for all of us,” added Ferguson. “We benefit from centralized management, from being able to consolidate servers, less refresh of hardware and more.”




Edited by Braden Becker
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