Monday, March 30, 2015

Not to be outdone, Amazon unleashes unlimited storage for $5 a month

Toshiba announces industry's densest 3D flash memory | USB Type-C peripherals are on the way, and storage devices are first up

Computerworld Storage

Not to be outdone, Amazon unleashes unlimited storage for $5 a month
Amazon announced unlimited cloud storage with Amazon Cloud Drive for $60 per year and Unlimited Photos Plan for $12 per year, the equivalent of less than $1 per month. Read More


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Cloud Usage Risk Report
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WEBCAST: IBM Corporation

Sharing Data between Clusters
Please Join IBM and Nuance Communications Inc. to learn how Nuance uses IBM Elastic Storage to improve the power of their voice recognition applications by managing storage growth, cost and complexity while increasing performance. Learn More

Toshiba announces industry's densest 3D flash memory
Toshiba today announced the development of the first 48-layer, three-dimensional flash memory.Based on a vertical stacking technology that Toshiba calls BiCS (Bit Cost Scaling), the new flash memory stores two bits of data per transistor, meaning it's a multi-level cell (MLC) flash chip. It can store 128Gbits (16GB) per chip. Sample shipments of products using the new process technology began Thursday.Toshiba first announced its efforts to create 3D NAND flash chips in a partnership agreement with SanDisk last year.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


WHITE PAPER: IBM

Information Lifecycle Governance Requirements Kit
Use this requirements kit from CGOC to find the tools and technology you need. Read More.

USB Type-C peripherals are on the way, and storage devices are first up
With Apple's latest MacBook and Google's newest Chromebook just out and featuring the new USB Type-C connector, we're on the lookout for peripherals that use the interface, and storage devices appear to be first out of the gate.Because the Type-C connector can be used to recharge laptops, it may ultimately do away with the need to carry bulky power adapters. Like older USB technology, Type-C will also connect monitors, external storage drives, printers, cameras and other peripherals. One beauty of the system is that cables have the same connector on both ends, and can be inserted into ports without worries about which side is up or down.Storage devices will eventually benefit from Type-C's USB 3.1 protocol, which can transfer data at 10Gbps (bits per second), double that of USB 3.0. But the first peripherals we're seeing support only USB 3.0 speeds.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

British Airways notifies frequent flyers of possible breach of their accounts
Many British Airways customers have found that reward points they accumulated for flights, called Avios, have disappeared from their accounts. Others have been locked out of their accounts completely. Read More


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