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May 29th, 2007

Why home RAID won't fly

Posted by Robin Harris @ 12:54 pm

Categories: Marketing, RAID

Tags: Disk, RAID, Robin Harris

Fellow ZDnet blogger George Ou posted this morning on Why dumb-downed no-RAID storage is bad for consumers. With all due respect, George couldn’t be more wrong. RAID doesn’t solve the home storage problem and its usability stinks.

The vendors who are backing off from selling or promoting RAID in the home are doing the right thing. Consumers don’t want RAID, they want to protect their data.

“Dumbed-downed” vs “it just works”
RAID, or any technology, is just a tool. Sometimes it is the right tool, sometimes it isn’t. RAID isn’t the right tool for consumers because it doesn’t meet consumer needs.

Well, RAID meets one consumer requirement: it has a catchy name.

RAID’s #1 problem: it doesn’t work
Consumers don’t want to lose their data. RAID doesn’t solve that problem: it is easy to lose data on a RAID array. It happens every day. Otherwise perfectly competent sysadmins and techs pull the wrong drive. They copy from the empty disk to the data disk. Silent data corruption hoses files and directories. Data disappears, never to return.

The very best that RAID can promise is that it protects your data better than a single disk. But any RAID system is still logically a disk and physically a group of disks. Therefore it will suffer all the ills of disks. A home environment, with crummy power, old cables and dirty air, is a stress test for disks.

So if you sell home RAID promising to protect people’s data, get ready for a world of hurt. “Class-action lawsuit” ring any bells?

RAID’s #2 problem: ease of use
Is the iPod/iTunes combination “dumbed-down” or “smartened-up?” The latter, of course. Even with five years to copy them, reviewers like Walt Mossberg say that no one else has the ease of use of iTunes.

Ease of use means something a little different in the world of RAID. RAID ease of use has to tackle two problems: setup and break/fix.

Setup is easy if you don’t mention RAID
Consumers have zero interest in RAID levels, and there is no way anyone can make RAID interesting enough that they’ll want to learn. So setting up a consumer RAID box means doing it for them.

Maybe that’s “dumbing-down” but I think it’s smart. And if you’re not going to let people set their RAID level, why mention RAID in the first place? Even smarter.

Break/fix is the hairy part
RAID’s other usability problem is a little different: it breaks ugly. You have to pull out a disk. You have to pull out the right disk. You have to put in a new disk. You have to wait hours after you replace the disk for the system to get back to normal.

Error-prone and impatient consumers are going to screw these up. Often. When they do the vendor will be blamed. And rightly so.

So what does work in home data protection?
I want to say one word to you. Just one word.

Backup.

Home users want to protect their data. RAID won’t do that. Backup will. It is that simple.

Now, there are a lot of possible variations on backup. Backup to disk. Backup to optical. Backup to Carbonite, Mozy or another on-line service.

One of the reasons that iTunes is successful is that backup is the data protection strategy. You store everything on your computer and sync to your iPod. Two copies, all the time.

The Storage Bits take
I like what Data Robotics is trying to do with Drobo. As I wrote two months ago:

I’ll be surprised if it isn’t a success, especially as volume ramps and distribution widens. Non-geeks don’t want to manage storage or drives. They just want to store their stuff, safely. Drobo gets that and makes it easy. It is the iPod of mass storage.

It is still an open question whether Drobo actually delivers on the promises. But at least they are making the right promises.

Update: all the good comments helped me sharpen my thinking about home RAID. If you want v2.0 it is over on StorageMojo. Living in a small town in the mountains of northern Arizona, I actually interact daily with the target market for home RAID. That’s why I know it won’t fly.

Comments welcome.

Robin HarrisRobin Harris has been messing with computers for over 30 years and selling and marketing data storage for over 20 in companies large and small. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 117 Talkback(s)
RAID 0 = 'not' RAID
In computing 0 is often used for 'false' and 1 for 'true' (see boolean logic).
This is applicable to RAID when RAID 0 is not RAID at all, there is no REDUNDANT Array with RAID 0.

Because of this I am pretty sure this article has nothing to do with RAID 0.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: markheyes Posted on: 12/12/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Right on  pjotr123 | 05/29/07
External RAID devices  ITguy5678 | 05/29/07
Big miss  gsteele531@... | 05/30/07
But...  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
Exactly my point  gsteele531@... | 05/31/07
A little more research on your part  ITguy5678 | 05/31/07
Good Points!  slide09 | 06/14/07
Your title should read "why marketing RAID to the home won't fly"  georgeou | 05/29/07
Also, you're misrepresenting the facts  georgeou | 05/29/07
There is NO setup for hardware RAID ...  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
Cost of "firmware-level RAID" is zero now  georgeou | 05/29/07
First point has some validity  gtdavies33@... | 05/29/07
Of course it isn't a backup, but 99% of consumers NEVER backup  georgeou | 05/29/07
jeez  hillman.d@... | 06/02/07
It works until it doesn't - then it is a royal PITA  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/29/07
Oh but it DOES work well and it can be very cheap  georgeou | 05/29/07
sorry george-- never underestimate the 70%  kckn4fun | 05/30/07
ok  hillman.d@... | 06/02/07
Why do you keep saying this?  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
You need to get out more  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/30/07
Wrong link?  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
Couldn't disagree more  ITguy5678 | 05/29/07
RAID != backup!!  toadlife | 05/29/07
Drive failure is fairly common and results in massive data loss ...  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
Not following your logic  toadlife | 05/29/07
You're right, but file journaling is a form of backup  georgeou | 05/29/07
But it is a backup, sort of  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
It's hardware backup, which isn't considered backup in the IT world  georgeou | 05/30/07
Right  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
You're right, but backup isn't a replacement for fault tolerance  georgeou | 05/29/07
Never said it was  toadlife | 05/29/07
Anyone saying RAID = Backup will fail an IT test  georgeou | 05/29/07
i agree but disagree  slide09 | 06/14/07
Data loss  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
Agreed  lantzn | 05/29/07
Not agreed at all. PC fgeeks have been using RAID for years  ajole | 05/30/07
less than 1% of consumers backup their data  georgeou | 05/29/07
Time Machine  lantzn | 05/29/07
This is the classic incremental backup approach ...  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
Time machine isn't even out yet, Windows had that feature since 2003  georgeou | 05/29/07
Isn't the subject external hard drives?  palmwarrior | 05/29/07
No we're not necessarily talking external  georgeou | 05/29/07
1% backup?  smallworldpaging@... | 06/01/07
RAID will "fly"  Species8472 | 05/29/07
6 Years? I doubt it.  bjbrock | 05/29/07
Hardware RAID v software RAID ...  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
I agree, hardware raid is the only  bjbrock | 05/30/07
You're right ... Not all 'hardware' RAID is really HARDWARE RAID ...  George Mitchell | 05/30/07
SATA is older than you think then.  Species8472 | 05/29/07
According to the SATA org.,  bjbrock | 05/30/07
And I ran my first SATA RAID array for two months  ajole | 05/30/07
any drive can die anytime.  bernalillo | 06/04/07
RAID in the home won't fly  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/29/07
Silent data corruption?  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
Yup, and I never recommended software RAID  georgeou | 05/29/07
Not everything works as advertized  gtdavies33@... | 05/29/07
If your life was on the line, which way would you bet  georgeou | 05/29/07
Neither  nucrash | 05/30/07
Perhaps because the controller in question is not really a RAID controller?  George Mitchell | 05/30/07
I call BS...  Patrick Jones | 05/30/07
iPod Backup? BS  IMHOYAAAH | 05/29/07
Especially when there are blinking red lights associated with the bad drive  georgeou | 05/29/07
Why not mirrored disks?  Rick_R | 05/29/07
Because...  vince@... | 05/29/07
How do files get corrupted?  George Mitchell | 05/29/07
Wrong world....  MGP2 | 05/29/07
Actually, you can pull out a mirrored drive and use it stand-alone  georgeou | 05/29/07
consumer 'magic mirror box'....  sj_z | 05/30/07
No more ugly that HD crash  voska | 05/30/07
Silent data corruption  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/29/07
Never had problems with silent data corruption  georgeou | 05/29/07
That's why it is called "silent"  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/30/07
I see a lot more total failures than silent corruption.  CobraA1 | 05/30/07
Home users need reliable backups, not RAID.  kraterz | 05/29/07
RAID DOES equal fault tolerance, but fault tolerance does NOT equal backup  georgeou | 05/29/07
You should apologize to Robin.  IAHawkeye | 05/29/07
Huh? You've lost me  georgeou | 05/29/07
Agree with IAHawkeye  Jim888 | 05/30/07
External RAID devices  ITguy5678 | 05/30/07
Your Logic Applies to Both Sides  TheGratefulNed | 05/30/07
I agree to a point...  Jim888 | 05/30/07
I can build a $500 gigabit NAS with VERY fast RAID Level 5  georgeou | 05/30/07
Thats nice... now the $500 PC is a grand...  Jim888 | 05/30/07
Excuse me?  jlongino@... | 05/30/07
RAID Is Not For Home Use  IAHawkeye | 05/29/07
If RAID is done right,  bjbrock | 05/30/07
I agree. But backup still has problem?  MrOtter | 05/29/07
Perhaps the author  bjbrock | 05/30/07
Ok Tell me how to back up  voska | 05/30/07
Why won't RAID at home fly?  nucrash | 05/30/07
My experience with RAID  CobraA1 | 05/30/07
This Why RAID won't fly  voska | 05/30/07
RAID won't fly UNLESS  hdwilkins | 05/30/07
That user will backup rather than go to RAID  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 05/30/07
Robin understands home users  GreyTech | 05/30/07
Hardware RAID v Software RAID ...  George Mitchell | 05/30/07
Raid does Work  Tease57 | 05/30/07
Software breakages propegate on RAID1  websiteadvice | 05/30/07
Raid will fly!  mames1701 | 05/31/07
RAID equals pain for home users  corlorde@... | 05/31/07
RAID for Enterprise!= RAID for consumer  nixstor | 05/31/07
Fly by RAID  shorty943@... | 06/01/07
You aren't an average user  R HarrisZDNet Moderator | 06/01/07
Consumers use of raid  paul.haviland@... | 06/04/07
Consumers can ignore anything  bernalillo | 06/04/07
hardware RAID does fly (just to what degree of loss is acceptible)  Asches | 06/04/07
RAID 1 works great! Read on to see how!  cburd63 | 06/04/07
Home raid not worth it.  gregzdnet | 06/04/07
Dell raid service is very bad,  bowling_z | 06/08/07
RAID for speed  hilandmalt | 06/09/07
It depends on where the RAID is located...  PredatorVI | 06/11/07
Why this author is a dumbass  XweAponX | 06/16/07
save $25 on a drobo  danaldonova | 06/17/07
Save through september  danaldonova | 07/25/07
Nail on the head  LeonBA | 11/05/08
Bad Argument  tommcd64 | 12/06/08
RAID 0 = 'not' RAID  markheyes | 12/12/08

What do you think?

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