Ninefold brings cloud storage out of private beta

 

Stays mum on underpinning architecture.

Local cloud provider Ninefold has moved its cloud storage service into public beta, offering to waive fees for a week.

The service had been in private beta for several weeks with an undisclosed number of customers.

For its public beta, Ninefold offered to waive storage and transaction fees until 31 March, with users to pay only outbound traffic costs at $0.90 a GB a month.

After the beta period, users would be charged a flat fee of $0.092 a GB a month for storage, regardless of the amount of data they put into the cloud.

By comparison, Amazon charged $0.093 a GB a month up to the first Terabyte for its "four nines" S3 storage service (99.99 percent uptime), but offered discounts when users hit certain storage volume tiers.

Ninefold managing director Peter James foreshadowed the release of a "whole range of pricing mechanisms" in the coming months.

He believed customers would be swayed by jurisdiction (data stored in Australia) and low latency, not just price.

Ninefold also charged $0.01 for each 10,000 transactions. Eventually, fees would be applied for inbound traffic, although James did not disclose when that would occur.

Ninefold's service aimed to provide three nines' reliability (99.9 percent uptime).

What was unclear was the technology platform that underpinned Ninefold's cloud storage service.

James repeatedly told iTnews that the company was "vendor neutral" and had technology from about 12 vendors in its architecture.

He declined to name the vendor of any piece of technology Ninefold used – including the underpinning storage platform - insisting that every piece of technology and the way the pieces were integrated was too commercially sensitive to disclose.

He said only that the underpinning storage hardware had been "purpose-built".

Ninefold was a subsidiary of Macquarie Telecom. It was hosted in Macquarie's Sydney CBD data centre.

The company also provided a cloud compute platform that competed with Amazon EC2 and Microsoft Azure.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


Ninefold brings cloud storage out of private beta
"I firmly believe that cloud storage is a massively valuable product, even more so than cloud compute. Having the data stored in Australia is well worth a premium for many businesses, including ..."
By vcirrus
 
 
 
Comments: 1
vcirrus
Mar 23, 2011 9:38 AM
I firmly believe that cloud storage is a massively valuable product, even more so than cloud compute. Having the data stored in Australia is well worth a premium for many businesses, including mine.

Not knowing the architecture is too risky for me. I want to know that it is resilient enough to cope with flood, fires and nuclear meltdowns and the occasional contractor plugging in the vacuum cleaner. I want to know that my data is stored in multiple physical locations and not just kept in RAID6 arrays in one location. I don't care what vendor is used, I care what engineers have designed it. Saying that there are three or five-nines (99.999% is five not three nines) of reliability without any supporting evidence is meaningless.
Comments have been disabled for this article.
 
 
 
Top Stories
Australian miners send drones to work
In-depth: Unmanned aerial vehicles in the resources sector.
 
The New Zealand telco problem
Opinion: Could Telstra save Kiwi telcos?
 
IT price probe to 'name and shame' gougers
Industry ducking the issue, committee claims.
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
Polls
Should the Government enact new legislation to protect copyright holders in the digital age?

   |   View results
Yes
  19%
 
No
  81%
TOTAL VOTES: 510

Vote