tech:

taffy

New HP Solutions Offer 100 TB/Hour Backups

[Techtaffy Newsdesk]

HP has launched a duplication solutions for the HP StoreOnce Backup family that delivers backup performance of up to 100 terabytes (TB) per hour and data recovery of up to 40 TB per hour in a single system. The backup speed is several times ahead of the closest competitor, according to internal HP tests, says the company.

Dave Donatelli (Executive vice president and general manager, Enterprise Group, HP): Clients are struggling with complex, incompatible storage solutions that are costly, hard to manage, underutilized and built for the past.

HP StoreOnce Backup is a federated deduplication solution, which means data is deduplicated once using a single technology and then moved elsewhere without having to be rehydrated—or added back in.

The solution has a large-scale deduplication appliance with fully automated high-availability features as well as an “autonomic restart” capability that ensures backup jobs complete even if there is a major hardware failure, reducing risk of data loss.

The solutions suite includes the HP StoreOnce Catalyst softwareHP Data Protector 7 software, powered by the Autonomy Intelligent Data Operating Layer (IDOL), HP Virtual Connect for 3PAR with Flat SAN technology, and HP Automated Network Management 9.2.

Leveraging technology developed by HP Labs, the company’s central research arm, HP StoreOnce includes over 50 patent-pending innovations.

[Image Courtesy: HP]

Just in

Vercel raises $250M

San Francisco-based Vercel, a frontend cloud platform provider, has secured $250 million in Series E funding, bringing the company's valuation to $3.25 billion.

Worky raises $6M (Mexico)

Mexico City-based Worky, a provider of HR and payroll software solutions for Mexican companies, has closed a $6 million Series A financing round.

Amazon announces $1.31B investment in France

Amazon has announced a new investment of about $1.31 billion (€1.2 billion) in France, which the company says will lead to the creation of over 3,000 permanent jobs in the country.

Amazon Web Services CEO Adam Selipsky to step down — CNBC

Adam Selipsky, CEO of Amazon’s cloud computing business, will step down from his role next month. Matt Garman, senior vice president of sales and marketing at Amazon Web Services, will succeed Mr. Selipsky after he exits the company June 3, writes Annie Palmer. 

Palo Alto Networks, Accenture expand alliance to offer generative AI services

Palo Alto Networks and Accenture have announced the expansion of their strategic alliance to provide new offerings that combine Palo Alto Networks' Precision AI technology with Accenture's secure generative AI services.