
This inclusion of zCompute in Lyve Cloud provides, Seagate says, an equivalent cloud storage and compute experience as other cloud providers – meaning, we assume, AWS, Azure, and GCP. A deal between Zadara and Seagate means that Lyve Cloud will deploy Zadara zCompute (servers with VM images) for pay-as-you-go use in its datacenters. Seagate says that Lyve Cloud offers data privacy, high performance, no lock-in, no API charges as well as no egress fees, so lowering the total cost of ownership (TCO) for storing, accessing, and moving massive data sets. He made the point that unlike AWS and Azure and GCP, “Lyve Cloud doesn’t charge for ingress or egress of data, making it a perfect complement to the Hammerspace automated data orchestration capabilities.” Working with Hammerspace, customers can build a data environment spanning across datacenters and Lyve Cloud … based on economic considerations of data movement.” Seagate business and marketing SVP Jeff Fochtman issued a statement: “Organizations are grappling with capturing, monetizing, and retaining ever-growing mass data sets. Exos CORVAULT is a 1.9PB SAS JBOD (just a box of disks) taking up four rack units.



Lyve seagate only photox software#
Lyve Cloud is an S3-compatible object storage service based on Seagate Lyve Drive racks with Exos AP (5U84) enclosures and object storage software installed in Equinix wordwide co-location datacenters. The GDE provides access to block, file, and object data across a customer’s edge sites, on-premises datacenters, and the public clouds so that distributed users anywhere in the world can see and access the same overall multi-hybrid cloud data set subject to their access rights. Seagate and Hammerspace are working together to have Seagate’s Lyve Cloud storage-as-a-service (STaaS) and Exos CORVAULT disk box included in Hammerspace’s Global Data Environment (GDE).
