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News

  • BlackBerry Torch could sink or swim on OS 6

    From a tech specs perspective, Research in Motion's new BlackBerry Torch smartphone isn't groundbreaking. Rather, its success or failure will hinge upon the strength of its revamped operating system.

  • Apple's iOS devices meet many enterprise security needs

    Apple's iOS, in the newer iPhones and the iPad, is now secure enough for many enterprise to deploy, according to a report from Forrester Research. But even the most recent version of iOS, in the iPhone 4, falls well short of the high security offered by Research in Motion's BlackBerry platform.

  • Misconfigured Cisco gear could lead to Wi-Fi breach

    Users of a popular Cisco Systems wireless access point may be setting themselves up for trouble if they leave a WPA wireless migration feature enabled, according to researchers at Core Security Technologies.

  • Google sued over Wi-Fi sniffing

    Galaxy Internet Services, an ISP for homes and businesses in Massachusetts, has filed a class-action lawsuit against Google over the search company's admitted blunder that it sniffed and stored data from Wi-Fi networks.

  • Carrier Ethernet market still growing, study shows

    Making a call using a mobile device over a wireless cellular network is so commonplace today that it's easy to forget the huge networks, comprised of wires, cell towers, routers, switches and data centers, that power those calls.

  • Will storage admins be automated out of a job?

    When it comes to job stability and pay, storage administrators had it made in 2009.
    In a volatile economy, as salaries for other IT positions were whittled down or saw little or no increases, the average salary for a storage administrator with 10 to 20 years' experience averaged more than US$100,000 last year, up 3.2% from 2008, according to Computerworld US' 2009 Salary Survey.
    With their Fibre Channel mastery and a personal fiefdom of equipment, protocols and activities that nobody else touches, storage administrators enjoy a unique degree of job stability. But now there's a crop of new storage automation technologies that promise to change the way these IT professionals do their jobs and may even require them to share control of the storage kingdom.
    "Storage is definitely at a point of change right now," from both a networking and organisational perspective, says Andrew Reichman, a storage analyst at Forrester Research. Fibre Channel-centric storage is slowly moving toward shared Ethernet, and automated storage technologies allow data and application managers to store data themselves. Add to the mix automated data tiering, thin provisioning and information life-cycle management technologies, and suddenly the once iron-clad position of storage administrator appears to be showing signs of rust.
    Dave Willmer, executive director of IT staffing firm Robert Half Technology, says based on what he sees in the market today, networking administrator skills will be in higher demand than storage administrator skills for the next 18 to 24 months.
    Over the past two or three years, he says, storage administrators had been in high demand because it was a time of heavy IT investment and a number of storage implementation projects were underway at large companies. "Fast-forward to today, and most companies are in maintenance mode versus implementation mode, mostly for budgetary reasons," he says. That means there should be an uptick in demand for networking administrators. What's more, companies will be highly focused on connectivity over the next 18 months, he adds. "It's all about access. That's more related to a networking administrator than a storage administrator," he says.
    As companies become more virtual and demand access through different modes of communication, they will require more network administrators, Willmer adds.
    Application-centric storage is one of the biggest threats to today's storage administrator role, Forrester's Reichman says.
    In essence, application-centric storage allows storage administrators to revert to basic disk systems while the advanced management of data happens in the application. Reichman cites Oracle as a vendor with application-centric storage capability via its Exadata product.
    "The big difference is, you wouldn't have the entire company's storage sitting in one group," Reichman says. "I predict that each major application stack would have its own storage experts sitting side by side with DBAs and the network team to make it all happen. So the reporting structure would change, and the storage director would be one of the most at-risk positions."
    Automated tiering technology could also lead to a decrease in reliance on storage administrators, industry watchers say.
    Today, only a few vendors offer automated storage tiering, which allows data volumes to be automatically moved between tiers of storage, depending on business performance requirements.
    Right now, tiering requires storage administrators to figure out the criticality of application data, test the performance of configurations, plan the move, test the ramifications and execute the move. All of that is time-consuming. If it were automated, there would be less reliance on storage administrators.
    The move the Ethernet-based storage networking also threatens the role of storage administrators.
    Scottrade CIO Ian Patterson sees the online financial services company dabbling with a converged infrastructure in 2010, driving a need for people with a mix of server, software and networking skills to support networked storage and server devices contained in a single chassis.
    "This will change the market for the type of people we need," he says. "It won't be just a guy who knows EMC and Hitachi storage, but [one] who knows server, storage and networking all in one device."
    The upshot: Networking professionals who are experienced in Ethernet could elbow in on the storage administrator's territory.
    All is not bleak for storage administrators, analysts agree. "Jobs don't go extinct in IT, they just change," says David Foote, CEO and chief research officer at Foote Partners. Just as storage administrators had to brush up their skills and certifications with the arrival of storage-area networks earlier in the decade and, later, virtualisation, they will have to prepare themselves for the coming wave of automation.
    What's more, a converged network doesn't necessarily mean a convergence of storage and network positions, says Wayne Adams, chairman of the Storage Networking Industry Association. "A storage administrator is going to be making sure data is always available, accurate and can be restored. A network administrator focuses on connectivity and bandwidth. We don't see an über skill set" with both roles combined in the future, says Adams.
    Storage administrators should pay close attention to the application teams whose data they store, in order to understand the businesses uses of that data. "They may someday report to those database teams," Reichman says. But storage administrators will still need to provide data protection, replication and provisioning, he adds. "So their skill set is going to remain valuable."

  • Juniper opens up Junos

    Juniper Networks has opened up its Junos operating system to third-party developers as part of a swathe of new announcements.

  • Bear Stearns had networking vision and nous

    While most will remember Bear Stearns for the its collapse and subsequent acquisition by JPMorgan Chase, those of us covering the networking industry for the past couple of decades will remember the company for its showcase network.

  • Smart buildings need smart networks: vendor

    Network managers could miss out on significant energy and infrastructure savings by not planning for convergence beyond data, voice and video, a network supplier has claimed.

  • Wanted: quality bandwidth to burn

    In telecomms and networking, 2006 carried a simple message: we want more bandwidth, and we want it now. This year, that need for speed will only increase at every level, as data sets grow larger and traditional media ends up digitised and served over Internet Protocol.

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