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Date:      Wed, 9 Jun 1999 10:29:54 -0400
From:      "Daniel Mainguy" <mainguy@total.net>
To:        <www@freeBSD.org>
Subject:   PCD Press Release
Message-ID:  <000801beb285$f2b38b80$4f24d2d8@mainguy>

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TO THE EDITORS
Free BSD


I have a news item, in the enclosed press release, about a NEW TECHNOLOGY IN
THE FIELD OF DATA STORAGE. I believe this story would be of interest to your
readers who are leaders in the field of Information Technology.
Please accept my best regards,
Louis Conrad.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

A technology that could greatly reduce the cost of online storage is
available for licensing.
With the need for information storage increasing exponentially with the
popularity of the Internet,a start-up has patented and is now offering for
licensing a piece of hardware that could translate into reduced costs for
enterprise storage.
Briefly, the product called "PCD", an acronym for "Processor of Convergent
Data" which is a nice way of saying that it manages or "processes" all types
of data resulting from the convergence of video, audio, software and content
files. Another way of describing the PCD is as a "jukebox on steroids".
Besides the traditional market of data intensive Fortune 1000 corporations,
the PCD might just be what the doctor ordered for those dozens of new
Internet companies providing large amount of contents over the Web.
By offering a low cost alternative to servers. The PCD is a totally
redesigned and rethought optical disc changer (a.k.a. jukebox or optical
disc library) that claims much faster disc swapping than any changer
currently on the market. And with the new tendency towards the separation of
servers from storage demonstrated by new network architectures such as
Storage Area Network (SAN) and Network Attached Storage (NAS) true
efficiency will be achieved with with an economical PCD.
Already, companies such as Warner brothers, Sony, Disney and other Hollywood
studios are expanding their current online offerings to provide more
Megabyte gobbling video and interactive contents. These sites currently use
stacks of servers and some are even using RAM disks (huge amounts of
extremely expensive RAM memory) to provide fast response time to accommodate
the large demands for their most popular contents.
The "need for speed" makes sense for accommodating the requests for the
"hot" content but after a day or a week or a month, the requests for the
once "hot" content decreases as newer "hotter" content takes over, so the
old content can be migrated to slower servers. Most Web sites don't migrate
and keep their entire contents on very expensive servers when in fact they
could migrate that contents as archives on slower optical libraries. Having
an economical means of storage would surely help in the development of such
sites.
The patented system requires far fewer steps in the process of swapping
discs and accomplishes those few steps much faster. The result is an optical
disc changer that can provide access time to any disc (up to 100) almost as
fast as a dedicated optical disc server when the disc spin up time is taken
into account.
The optical medium (CD, DVD) is a cheaper medium and, coupled with a
jukebox, can provide access time to all the archives at a fraction of the
cost. The problem is that with current jukebox technologies, swap time is
very slow, from 5 to 10 seconds, and that discourages a lot of companies
from investing in that technology.
That's where the PCD comes to the rescue by offering a substantially faster
access time with a machine that costs less than an equivalent optical disc
server. Besides requiring fewer moving and other mechanical the PCD is also
less expensive simply because a server has one player/recorder for each
disc, so a 100 disc server has 100 individual players/recorders (EACH
COSTING FROM $70.00 TO $500.00 or more) whereas a PCD only has from 1 to 8
players/recorders but still carry a stack of 100 discs. The access time
between each disc is so fast (estimated to be at around 1/10th of a second)
that even during peak demands, by swapping quickly, the PCD could provide
requests to more than 8 end users simultaneously without much of a
difference to each one because when the demand is huge, other constraints
come into play, mainly bandwidth, which slow download time to a crawl and
obviate any speed advantage that a server can have.
The storage business is not the "sexiest" area of hi-tech because everybody
takes it for granted. Right now, all the eyes are toward "Internet
start-ups" proposing new "business models" but let's not forget that what
makes those businesses possible is software and data and they both need
storage.
Additional details about the product can be obtained through the following
contacts:
www.pcdproject.com
ATTN: Louis Conrad
121 St-Pierre Street, office 606
Montreal,Quebec
Canada
H2Y 2L6

Phone: (514)992-0298
Fax: (514)843-8506
E-mail: pcdproject@videotron.ca






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