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Windows 8 Storage Spaces with DrivePool features
http://usingwindowshomeserver.com/2012/01/05/microsoft-talk-storage-spaces-for-windows-8/
Looks interesting, but it's far from ready to test, and they said it won't be as full featured as the old Drive Extender for WHS etc.
I'm sure DrivePool can be tailored to use the new features of Windows 8 in the future. I wouldn't be surprised if the Storage Spaces is too generic and DrivePool ends up being better in the long run. Either way, I'm looking forward to M4 since I won't be running Windows 8 on my production WHS 2011 machine any time soon! (and I doubt will see gold master win 8 in 2012)
I just wanted to share the link to create discussion for now. The future of innovation is never ending and entertaining.
Comments
DrivePool always shows you the actual free space which can dynamically increase / decrease as you add and remove drives from the pool. This is probably a consequence of using a RAID-like system.
Storage Spaces is Microsoft's version of Sun's ZFS, that's it.
Honestly, it's the right way to make something scalable, like Microsoft
needs to. I just worry how this will affect DrivePool's development.
What they have announced is very close if not exactly the same as the functionality in a Drobo. However the Drobo is a premium product sold at a high price to media professionals and corporations. It works well as it is a hardware box with no possibility to hack its internal workings. Microsoft Storage Spaces is a software implementation in Windows and we all know how vulnerable Windows is to systematic problems, fiddling with the registry etc.
Product success is all about product positioning. I agree with Philmatic that Spaces can be successful with larger corporations. They have the IT support staff who can manage the complexities. However for the small company or home users, I think Storage Spaces will be too complex to handle. People will not understand the RAID aspect and loose data, and then Storage Spaces will get a bad reputation for the home or small company users.
Myself, I have eight computers at home, and an extensive DVD and Blu-Ray collection of several thousand movies. I used DriveExtender since 2007 and now Drivepool M3 since last month, to manage the storage on my Intel Atom based SQA-5H WHS (upgraded to WHS 2010) where I have 10 internal and 10 USB external 2TB WD Green HDs. It works very well. Over the five years I have used WHS I have had five hard drive failures and I have been able to save most of my files when I had disk problems as the underlying file system has been NTFS.
To make Drivepool a commercial success (and thereby a successful product for Covecube), you could position it as a solution for home users (as you write WHS 2011) and SME's (Small Business Server) and also try to package it together with Scanner as a solution to sell through hardware vendors.
Tranquil PC in the UK teamed up with Drive Bender (renaming it Monstor). However Tranquil PC have never been good at marketing and nowadays there are several new manuacturers of small and home server hardware, foremost in Germany and the UK. I suggest you contact them and see if you can partner up on them having Scanner and Drivepool pre-installed on the boxes they sell. Then you can carve out a niche for your software and ensure it becomes a surviving solution for years ahead.
Drivepool is so good that I think many proficient home users, such as myself, will have no concern paying well for the software once it hits version 1 status. However to sell only to consumers may not be enough to ensure sucessful product launch, given Microsofts new initiative.
@Alex: i agree with Shane and joreri508, make a windows 7 build and maybe a build for windows 8 beta, then you can see, how successful it is. But don't forget to make a good advertising.
as you said, for Drivepool 1.0 or later, it is maybe a good feature, if Drivepool is working together with the scanner to discover bad drives and move all the files off it.
PS: M4 looks great.
Agreed with letho, you have built an awesome product and we are all eagerly awaiting its "official" release. Yoes M$ is big and bullies everyone around, but your software is so much more than a bulk sized box of band-aids all stuck on top of one another to keep things working... A-la-microsoft way of developing software.
Keep up the amazing work Alex!!