by Irshad Raihan, Red Hat Storage - Big Data Product Marketing
The trusty paper shredder in my home office died last week. I’m in the market for a new one. Years ago, when I purchased “Shreddy” (of course, it had a name) after a brief conversation with a random store clerk, choices were few and information scarce. In fact, paper shredders weren’t really considered standard personal office equipment as they are today. Most good shredders were built for offices not homes. Back in the market more than a decade later, it’s clear that the search for a new shredder is going to be trickier than I had imagined.
A paper shredder is a lot like big data.
Being a bigdataholic, I couldn’t help liken my search to that of a CIO looking for a Big Data solution. Here’s why:
- Agility – Whether it’s the type of cut (micro cut wasn’t even an option back then) or what goes into the shredder (CDs, credit cards), agility is a selling point. Similarly, enterprises need to be agile about the expanding types of data they ingest into their data environment and the kind of analyses they run on the data, to stay current with competitive threats.
- Cost – Rather than use cheaper parts, some manufacturers are thinking creatively to reduce not just acquisition cost but total cost to the customer. Smart blades that adjust dynamically to the load, and smart motors that allow reduced down time between shredding sessions, are just two such innovations. Having more information readily available to compare models further helps customers make an optimal decision (certainly beats my random conversation with a store clerk who, I’m pretty sure, wasn’t even assigned to the small office products section).
- Capacity – Greater identity theft means that more paper needs to be shredded. At the same time, changing regulatory compliance standards requires more printed verbiage be mailed to customers. As a result, shredder motors have gotten more powerful, blades bigger, and waste baskets bulkier – just as the volume and velocity of data being ingested have grown exponentially. As a CIO, planning for this added capacity should be a key tenet of your big data strategy.
- Energy – Most new shredders tout energy consumption in their elevator pitch. In the old days, it really wasn’t a concern. Today’s CIOs look at energy as a way to reduce cost. Technologies, such as Red Hat JBoss Middleware, could help consolidate data silos and address server sprawl, optimizing energy consumption.
- Portability – Castors are pretty standard just as enterprises consider portability of their data across mobile, cloud and virtualized platforms, using Red Hat technologies such as OpenStack, Red Hat OpenShift, and software-defined storage.
- Scale – Most high quality shredders were built for office usage with long but infrequent sessions (scale-up) as opposed to home office usage which tends to spread the load across more frequent but shorter sessions (scale-out).
- Interoperability – Shredders today give you the option of using third party containers and even waster baskets in some cases. All the shredders of old were locked into a specific size and type of container.
Fortunately, unlike my shredder you don’t have to rip and replace your data management infrastructure and software to cope with evolving big data demands. As I outlined in our previous big data blog post, we see the best strategy for success with big data is to complement not reinvent. Watch this space for more insights on how you can tame the beast.
And yes, if you have recommendations for a big data-esque paper shredder, please add a comment to this blog post - in return you shall receive a lifetime of good karma!
Sobre el autor
Navegar por canal
Automatización
Las últimas novedades en la automatización de la TI para los equipos, la tecnología y los entornos
Inteligencia artificial
Descubra las actualizaciones en las plataformas que permiten a los clientes ejecutar cargas de trabajo de inteligecia artificial en cualquier lugar
Nube híbrida abierta
Vea como construimos un futuro flexible con la nube híbrida
Seguridad
Vea las últimas novedades sobre cómo reducimos los riesgos en entornos y tecnologías
Edge computing
Conozca las actualizaciones en las plataformas que simplifican las operaciones en el edge
Infraestructura
Vea las últimas novedades sobre la plataforma Linux empresarial líder en el mundo
Aplicaciones
Conozca nuestras soluciones para abordar los desafíos más complejos de las aplicaciones
Programas originales
Vea historias divertidas de creadores y líderes en tecnología empresarial
Productos
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- Red Hat OpenShift
- Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
- Servicios de nube
- Ver todos los productos
Herramientas
- Training y Certificación
- Mi cuenta
- Soporte al cliente
- Recursos para desarrolladores
- Busque un partner
- Red Hat Ecosystem Catalog
- Calculador de valor Red Hat
- Documentación
Realice pruebas, compras y ventas
Comunicarse
- Comuníquese con la oficina de ventas
- Comuníquese con el servicio al cliente
- Comuníquese con Red Hat Training
- Redes sociales
Acerca de Red Hat
Somos el proveedor líder a nivel mundial de soluciones empresariales de código abierto, incluyendo Linux, cloud, contenedores y Kubernetes. Ofrecemos soluciones reforzadas, las cuales permiten que las empresas trabajen en distintas plataformas y entornos con facilidad, desde el centro de datos principal hasta el extremo de la red.
Seleccionar idioma
Red Hat legal and privacy links
- Acerca de Red Hat
- Oportunidades de empleo
- Eventos
- Sedes
- Póngase en contacto con Red Hat
- Blog de Red Hat
- Diversidad, igualdad e inclusión
- Cool Stuff Store
- Red Hat Summit