Online storage service adding a terabyte a week

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Streamload, a San Diego-based company providing online storage services, is adding more than a terabyte a week of storage to its network to keep ahead of consumer demands for online storage, said chief executive Steve Iverson at the AlwaysOn Innovation Summit taking place in Palo Alto, California this week.

"We've got data centres in San Diego, Phoenix and Frankfurt, Germany. Half of our customers are outside the US," he said. "We are storing over 8 billion files."

The boom in online storage is being driven by an explosion of digital content. When Hotmail first arrived on the scene, consumers typically stored data in the form of emails and attachments on online services. Now, they want to store music, movies, pictures and blogs, and access it all through different devices.

"It's not just about expanded storage capacity. It's also about remotely accessing your data," Iverson added. Approximately 80,000 people a week open new storage accounts on Streamload's network.

Luckily, the price of storage continues to plummet, dropping around 50 percent per year. Hard drives cost about 50 cents or less per gigabyte, and that's on retail hard drives. A thousand gigabytes go into a terabyte. Thus, a terabyte worth of hard drives, if purchased in volume, will cost a few hundred dollars. Seagate sells a complete home storage system with a terabyte for $899 (£489) that comes with a lot of electronics and a plastic housing that raw disks would not come with.

Streamload faces huge competitors in Google, Yahoo and Microsoft. The company in part hopes to survive among these giants by selling its service through others. AMD's Live service, a media vault for customers, is run by Streamload. The first 25GB of storage are free. For $10 a month, consumers can get 250GB from the Live service.

Sprint will soon offer a similar service to its DSL customers, Iverson said, noting that such companies would rather have a private-label service than send customers to Google. Streamload also has patents and intellectual property it could license to large storage providers.

Talkback

New Storage Nanotechnology Needed

Could save billions in gallons of oil used to generate electricity for these behemoth data storage centers.

Would you go to work in a horse and buggy !

That's exactly what todays storage technology is,,,,,,, Old and Antiquatied.

Here's a Storage technology that will come out around 2009 to help save our fragile environment.

http://colossalstorage.net

via Facebook 29 July, 2006 15:42
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