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Cloud Businesses Data Storage Google IT

Google Nearline Delivers Some Serious Competition To Amazon Glacier 71

SpzToid writes Google is offering a new kind of data storage service – and revealing its cloud computing strategy against Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. The company said on Wednesday that it would offer a service called Nearline, for non-essential data. Like an AWS product called Glacier, this storage costs just a penny a month per gigabyte. Microsoft's cheapest listed online storage is about 2.4 cents a gigabyte. While Glacier storage has a retrieval time of several hours, Google said Nearline data will be available in about three seconds. From the announcement: "Today, we're excited to introduce Google Cloud Storage Nearline, a simple, low-cost, fast-response storage service with quick data backup, retrieval and access. Many of you operate a tiered data storage and archival process, in which data moves from expensive online storage to offline cold storage. We know the value of having access to all of your data on demand, so Nearline enables you to easily backup and store limitless amounts of data at a very low cost and access it at any time in a matter of seconds."
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Google Nearline Delivers Some Serious Competition To Amazon Glacier

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  • It's the webframe, Captain! She kenna take any more data...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    How do they do it?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Kadin2048 ( 468275 )

      Yeah I'd like some more meat to the story as well. Amazon Glacier achieves its pricing by using low-RPM consumer drives plugged into some sort of high-density backplanes; supposedly they are so densely packed that you can only spin up a few drives at once due to power and heat issues. Hence the delay.

      I assume Google is doing something similar, maybe with somewhat better power or cooling since they're offering faster retrieval times which implies that perhaps they can spin up a higher percentage of drives

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I thought glacier is tape storage system.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by snowgirl ( 978879 )

        https://what-if.xkcd.com/63/ [xkcd.com]

        It's common knowledge that Google has already been using consumer-grade drives for all of their servers. Because if a drive fails, "so what, we have another one over there holding the data..."

        This is pretty much similar to what happened with GMail. They came out and said, "here, have a gigabyte for free!" and everyone was like, "yeah, right..."

        Google has storage leaking out of its ears, and generates massive amounts of new data every day... sticking other people's data into the p

      • by Anonymous Coward

        This service uses Google normal hard drive architecture, but makes use of the fact that most of their drives have free capacity in terms of Gigabytes, but are running out of IO bandwidth (ie. There are so many users trying to read and write the data that if they filled the drives to capacity, not everyone would get good read and write performance).

        This product is basically filling the drive to capacity, but giving you the lowest priority for reads and writes. Hence why it takes 3 seconds to read dat

        • by jtgd ( 807477 )
          and I'll guess that their data is in the outer cylinders and your data is on the inner cylinders.
    • How do they do it?

      They use idle HDDs. The three seconds is the time it takes for them to spin up. Google pays less than $30/TB for HDDs ($120 for a 4TB HDD). If they charge $0.01/GB/Month that is $120/TB/year. If a drive lasts three years, they make $360/TB off a $30/TB investment.

      • Good analysis here, Shanghai.

        In terms of the prediction of "$360/TB off a $30/TB investment", does that take into account redundancy to protect their liability for drive failure? I'm thinking they have at least two copies of everything a customer uploads. Maybe three. It's still great money, but I think the numbers are more like $360/TB off a $60/TB investment.
  • by Pausanias ( 681077 ) <pausaniasx@ g m a il.com> on Thursday March 12, 2015 @01:18AM (#49239199)
    A penny a month per gigabyte... that's $10/month per terabyte... that is already what Dropbox charges for "fast" storage. So what gives? Why would I pay $10/month for a terabyte of slow storage when I can get the same amount of storage for the same price in a regular, fast format with Dropbox?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Don't ask me, I don't even know if it means storage or bandwidth usage. Don't both need to be mentioned?

      • It is just the pure storage... bandwidth is extra, which makes it even worse compared to Dropbox, where bandwidth is included.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by wh1pp3t ( 1286918 )

      A penny a month per gigabyte... that's $10/month per terabyte... that is already what Dropbox charges for "fast" storage. So what gives? Why would I pay $10/month for a terabyte of slow storage when I can get the same amount of storage for the same price in a regular, fast format with Dropbox?

      Why pay for a terabyte of storage when you are not using it to capacity?

    • by SpzToid ( 869795 )

      What if you had more than just 1 Tb? If you had more than 1tb, how is Dropbox going to help you at all? Oh right, now you must purchase DropBox for Business, and your price just went way up. https://www.dropbox.com/busine... [dropbox.com]

    • Heck, for less than $10 a month you get infinite OneDrive storage.

      • by SpzToid ( 869795 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @04:15AM (#49239629)

        Interesting point, so I read up a bit. This only applies to Office365 customers. What about Linux, (etc.) users that can't fully utilize Office365? This really seems almost like a consumer option, and there are certainly business use-cases where this just ain't gonna fly. There's a 20,000 file limit, *period*, and the maximum file size is 10Gb, which is limiting for some, (especially those folks who roll their own encryption and compression).

        For those reasons, Microsoft Office365/OneDrive doesn't seem like a serious competitor to Google Nearline, Amazon Glacier, or Microsoft Azure services.

        http://www.techrepublic.com/ar... [techrepublic.com]

    • by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @04:33AM (#49239673)

      A penny a month per gigabyte... that's $10/month per terabyte... that is already what Dropbox charges for "fast" storage. So what gives? Why would I pay $10/month for a terabyte of slow storage when I can get the same amount of storage for the same price in a regular, fast format with Dropbox?

      Here is an answer [quora.com] from someone on Quora.

      Dropbox offers no Service Level Agreement. Actually they specifically provide no warrantees whatsoever about their service (http://www.dropbox.com/terms) [dropbox.com]. This is a non-starter for many CIOs.

      Beyond that, the fact that Dropbox doesn't "own" the underlying cloud storage architecture -- Amazon S3 -- could be an issue, although they advertise it as secure via in-transit and on-disk encryption (https://www.dropbox.com/help/27) [dropbox.com].

      If it still is the case that Dropbox uses S3 itself, then that wouldn't make business sense for them to pay more for storage than they're charging their own customers (even if they've decided not to offer a Service Level Agreement).

      So my guess is that this has to do with the way they count the storage for customers. Assuming that their customers do not encrypt their data before they place it on DropBox (which would make sense because DropBox customers are rarely CIOs themselves), then DropBox is most likely hashing the content and only storing a single copy of a file even if there are thousand virtual instances of that same file throughout their system.

      Also note that in the special case where a company is footing the bill and DropBox can't count the same file multiple times within that same company, otherwise the customer company would complain, then DropBox actually advertises a rate of [dropbox.com] $15 per 5 terabytes per month per user (with no Service Level Agreement of any kind even for business users [dropbox.com]).

      • by Alomex ( 148003 )

        , then DropBox is most likely hashing the content and only storing a single copy of a file even if there are thousand virtual instances of that same file throughout their system.

        I'm pretty sure they have said as much themselves.

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        Assuming that their customers do not encrypt their data before they place it on DropBox (which would make sense because DropBox customers are rarely CIOs themselves), then DropBox is most likely hashing the content and only storing a single copy of a file even if there are thousand virtual instances of that same file throughout their system.

        Wouldn't it make more sense for them to dedupe on some kind of variable block size level than the file level? If someone uploads v1 of some 25 meg powerpoint file and

    • Can you get fast private connections to Dropbox? Google? AWS has directconnect - you can get Gbps connections to move backups to Glacier
  • 1 cent per month per GB is $40 for 4TB per month, or 1/5 of what an external 4TB USB3.0 disk costs. As this is "nonessential" data, backup is optional. Sure, the external disk somehow needs to be connected to your server, and there are other factors, but doing this yourself seems to be a lot cheaper.

    Yes, I know if you do it yourself, there is cost for the person doing it as well, but you need to manage the cloud-storage also, and over a worse interface and you get less control in the cloud and cannot put an

    • Re:Seems expensive (Score:5, Informative)

      by DaHat ( 247651 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @03:01AM (#49239457)

      but doing this yourself seems to be a lot cheaper.

      Oh? Have you factored in the cost of ensuring that you always have an offsite and fully up to date copy, not to mention secondary and tertiary copies for transit time in case your primary datacenter/server happens to kick the bucket/get stolen/evaporate?

      It's easy to compare the cost of an offered service to what you can pick up seeming similar equipment for from Amazon or Newegg... the realities though are far more complex.

      and cannot put anything confidential there (unless you are not bothered by various TLAs searching through it).

      There are ways to manage even that, see this brief bit of Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] for a start.

      I don't know if there are any other commercial or enterprise products out there that do it, but I know this one [microsoft.com] stores all of it's data in the cloud (with a local cache) but does all of the encryption on site. Only if you choose does the encryption key leave your site and then only in a way you choose making it rather problematic for a TLA or Microsoft to get to your data.

      It is an interesting world when you are dealing with data you cannot legally delete for a period of time and simply want to rid yourself of the burden of having to store it locally. Suing Google or Amazon because their cold storage failed is a far better option than having your IT guy tell you that the HD they stored the crucial data to doesn't spin up anymore... and that the backup disk ended up in the secretary desktop.

      • Re:Seems expensive (Score:4, Interesting)

        by paulhar ( 652995 ) on Thursday March 12, 2015 @03:35AM (#49239533)

        > Oh? Have you factored in the cost of ensuring that you always have an offsite and fully up to date copy, not to mention secondary and tertiary copies for transit time in case your primary datacenter/server happens to kick the bucket/get stolen/evaporate?

        Assumption: They guarantee that your backups/archives are safe.
        Reality: "You are responsible for properly configuring and using the Service Offerings and taking your own steps to maintain appropriate security, protection and backup of Your Content, " Notice the words "and backup". If they lose your data it's your problem, not theirs. http://aws.amazon.com/agreemen... [amazon.com]

        > It's easy to compare the cost of an offered service to what you can pick up seeming similar equipment for from Amazon or Newegg... the realities though are far more complex.

        Not to those who are 'skilled in the art'. For example. a copy of CrashPlan, two 3TB drives locally, one 3TB drive at a parent/friends house. For the paranoid, two 3TB drives at two peoples houses. Assumption: network bandwidth is sufficient and/or not much data change rate and/or happy to shuttle drives backward and forward.

        Or, if you don't want to use crashplan, use rsync or other such replication technique. Set up md5sum scanning to run every few weeks at each location, takes a day or so to run and you're 100% certain that bitrot hasn't set in.

        Advantages:
        * I can touch each physical box.
        * It's massively cheaper.
        * Recovery is much quicker since I can just grab the physical copy.
        * I know how the backup infrastructure is designed. If something goes wrong it's my fault, I can't rail uselessly against the sky gods if suddenly all my data goes away.

        Disadvantages:
        * You have to maintain it. You can't trust the sky gods to maintain it for you - a drive fails, you have to buy&replace. Forget to configure something/validate something is done correctly then it's your own fault.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

        Spideroak. Encryption client side, reasonable SLA. Not the cheapest by far but you get what you pay for.

        • by chihowa ( 366380 )

          Spideroak. Still closed source five years after they said that they would open it. Never independently audited. All expectations of security and privacy are derived solely from marketing claims. Even the "zero knowledge" claim is more marketing speak than truth. Caveat emptor.

          Closed source all-in-one crypto and cloud storage is almost never the right answer.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        and cannot put anything confidential there (unless you are not bothered by various TLAs searching through it).

        There are ways to manage even that, see this brief bit of Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] for a start.

        That only works if you do not process the data in the same cloud. But then the price goes through the roof as you have to pay transfer fees and the offer becomes very expensive.

  • Is there already some personal backup software for GNU/Linux that encrypts all data and can use this as storage?

    I'm looking for large offline storage but strong client-side encryption is a must.

    • by SpzToid ( 869795 )

      git-annex and Amazon glacier might serve you well. Encrypting your GIT/Glacier archive using your PGP key is a one-click-and-save option. With Google's recent announcement of Nearline I imagine over time it will be supported also. GIT annex came about through a kick-starter campaign, and you're welcome to support the project.

      Here's some links to help you:

      http://git-annex.branchable.co... [branchable.com]

      Specifically for Glacier:
      http://git-annex.branchable.co... [branchable.com]

    • I recently 'discovered' duplicity - it's very good for this sort of thing, but it can't use this or Glacier as a store. I can use S3 though, which you can use as staging for Glacier.

      Personally, I use Duplicity to backup my NAS to another disk. I then have a script that copies full backups up to Glacier (and then deletes them). I'm working on a nicer glacier client for this, but the java one I downloaded from github works well enough to get going.

  • Google is a tech giant... and there is no stopping it. No wonder it will overtake everything in its way at this rate.
  • I thought that our tape backup system is luxury, for such a small company. Quite the contrary, it seems that tape is very cheap. Back of the envelope calculation: Our daily full backup is about 600 gigabytes. We are using 6 pieces of LTO-3 tapes for the last days and 1 for each month, plus 1 for each year. That is about 23 tapes in use. Total of 23Ã--600GB is 13800GB, 138 dollar each month on Google Nearline, which is 1700$ per year. The total cost of the tape drive, the tapes and the SCSI adapter wa

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