Data Management Glossary nnn
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A
- Active Storage
- Adaptive Data Management
- AI Agents
- AI and Corporate Data
- AI Compute
- AI Data Extraction
- AI Data Governance
- AI Data Ingestion
- AI Data Leakage
- AI Data Management
- AI Data Pipelines
- AI Data Preparation
- AI Data Workflows
- AI Inferencing
- AI Infrastructure
- Air Gap
- Alternate Data Streams (ADS)
- Amazon (AWS) S3 Intelligent Tiering
- Amazon FSx
- Amazon Glacier (AWS Glacier)
- Amazon S3 (AWS S3)
- Amazon S3 Glacier Instant Retrieval
- Amazon Tiering
- Analytics-driven Data Management
- Application Programming Interface (API)
- Archival Storage
- Archiving
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- AWS DataSync
- AWS Lambda
- AWS Snowball
- AWS Storage
- Azure Data Box
- Azure NetApp Files
- Azure Storage
- Azure Tiering
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C
- Capacity Planning
- Carbon footprint
- Carbon Usage Effectiveness
- Chain of Custody
- Chargeback
- Checksum
- Cloud Archiving
- Cloud Cost Optimization
- Cloud Costs
- Cloud Data Analytics
- Cloud Data Growth Analytics
- Cloud Data Management
- Cloud Data Migration
- Cloud Data Storage
- Cloud File Storage
- Cloud Migration
- Cloud NAS
- Cloud Object Storage
- Cloud Storage Gateway
- Cloud Tiering
- CloudPools
- Cold Data
- Common Internet File System (CIFS)
- Compression
-
D
- Dark Data
- Data Analytics
- Data Archiving
- Data Backup
- Data Center Consolidation
- Data Center Emissions
- Data Classification
- Data Curation
- Data Governance
- Data Hoarding
- Data Indexing
- Data Lake
- Data Lakehouse
- Data Lifecycle Management
- Data Lineage
- Data Literacy
- Data Management
- Data Management for AI
- Data Management Policy
- Data Migration
- Data Migration Chain of Custody
- Data Migration Plan
- Data Migration Software
- Data Migration Warm Cutover
- Data Mobilization
- Data Orchestration
- Data Protection
- Data Retention
- Data Retrieval
- Data Services
- Data Silos
- Data Sprawl
- Data Storage
- Data Storage Costs
- Data Storage Management Services (DSMS)
- Data Storage Optimization
- Data Storage Tags
- Data Tagging
- Data Tiering
- Data Transfer
- Data Virtualization
- Deduplication
- Deep Analytics
- Dell PowerScale
- Dell PowerScale SmartPools
- Department Showback
- Digital Business
- Digital Pathology Data Management
- Direct Data Access
- Director (Komprise Director)
- Disaster Recovery
- Dynamic Data Analytics
- Dynamic Links
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E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
K
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
- S3
- S3 Data Migration
- S3 Intelligent Tiering
- Scale-Out Grid
- Scale-Out Storage
- Secondary Storage
- Sensitive Data Detection
- Shadow AI
- Shadow IT
- Sharding
- Shared-Nothing Architecture
- Showback
- Smart Data Workflows
- SmartPools
- SMB Data Migration
- SMB protocol (Server Message Block)
- Solid State Drives (SSDs)
- Storage Area Network (SAN)
- Storage Array
- Storage as a Service
- Storage as a Service (STaaS)
- Storage Assessment
- Storage Costs
- Storage Efficiency
- Storage Insights
- Storage Metrics
- Storage Pool
- Storage Reclamation
- Storage Refresh
- Storage Tiering
- Stubs
- Sustainable Data Management
- Symbolic Link
- System Metadata
-
U
- Unstructured Data
- Unstructured Data AI
- Unstructured Data Analytics
- Unstructured Data Classification
- Unstructured Data Governance
- Unstructured Data Management
- Unstructured Data Migration
- Unstructured Data Preparation
- Unstructured Data Storage
- Unstructured Data Tiering
- Unstructured Data Workflows
- Unstructured Metadata
Flash Storage
Flash storage is storage media intended to electronically secure data, which can be electronically erased and reprogrammed. The other advantage is it responds faster than a traditional disc, increasing performance.
With the increasing volume of stored unstructured data from the growth of mobility and Internet of Things (IoT), organizations are challenged with both storing data and the opportunities it brings. Disk drives can be too slow, due to the speed limitations. For stored data to have real value, businesses must be able to quickly access and process that data to extract actionable information.
Flash storage has a number of advantages over alternative storage technologies
- Greater performance. This leads to agility, innovation, and improved experience for the users accessing the data – delivering real insight to an organization
- Reliability. With no moving parts, Flash has higher uptime due to no moving parts. A well-built all-flash array can last between 7-10 years.
While Flash storage can offer a great improvement for organizations, it is still too expensive as a place to store all data. Flash storage has been about twenty times more expensive per gigabyte than spinning disk storage over the past seven years. Many enterprises are looking at a tiered model with high-performance flash for hot data and cheap, deep object or cloud storage for cold data.
Related Terms
Getting Started with Komprise:
- Learn about Intelligent Data Management
- Schedule a demonstration with our team
- Read the latest State of Unstructured Data Management Report