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| U.S.
Energy Dept.'s Brookhaven National Laboratory to Use MT...
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| May 14,
2002: 8:45 a.m. EST |
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ANAHEIM, Calif. (PRNewswire) - MTI
Technology Corp. , a leading provider of storage and business solutions
for more than two decades, announced it has installed 13 of its
Vivant(TM) D100 storage area network (SAN) storage solution at the U.S.
Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, N.Y. The
Vivant D100s will provide 42 terabytes of storage capacity.
The sales transaction was a joint effort involving MTI's Federal Systems
Group and New York regional office, as well as A&T Systems, Inc.,
serving as the prime contractor to Brookhaven. A&T Systems
exclusively holds MTI's enterprise storage products on its GSA Schedule
and provides procurement and acquisition guidance in negotiating
contracts with the federal government.
The Vivant D100s were installed in the Computing Facility of
Brookhaven's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a scientific
research facility used by hundreds of physicists from around the world
to study what the universe may have looked like in the first few moments
after its creation. The Computing Facility handles the computation,
storage and network resources required to process and analyze the
enormous amounts of data generated by several ongoing RHIC experiments.
The computational resources are provided by a large farm of Intel-based
systems running the Linux operating system. There are two types of Linux
farms at the Brookhaven Computing Facility, one dedicated to processing
raw event data, raw bits and bytes from the detectors -- to create
reconstructed event data, tracks, hits, and collisions -- the other
dedicated to the analysis of the reconstructed events.
The MTI storage resources are served to the Linux farms through a group
of Sun Microsystems NFS servers with 80 terabytes of storage area
network (SAN)- based RAID arrays. Most of the storage involves
reconstructed data from the Collider, packaged in 1- and 2-gigabyte
files.
"This data is not backed up, so it is essential that the RAID
storage work properly as designed," said Maurice Askinazi, UNIX
systems administrator and group leader at the Computing Facility.
"Our task was to find a reliable, yet affordable disk product that
would serve as centralized storage for hundreds of Linux nodes, which
use batch software to sift through petabytes of data. Because our
existing MTI 3600 was a reliable workhorse for the Computing Facility,
we decided to evaluate the D100; it ran without failure and was
configurable for the performance we require."
The MTI Vivant D100 is a state-of-the-art multi-terabyte storage
solution that brings enterprise-class storage capabilities to
departmental, workgroup and storage-intensive specialized applications
environments. Its flexible design enables users to connect the unit to a
single host or a SAN via dual high-speed Fibre Channel connections. This
creates redundant data paths between the host and storage, maximizing
performance and availability.
About MTI Technology Corp.
MTI's mission is to provide Continuous Access to Online Information on a
worldwide basis through fault-tolerant, cross-platform data storage
solutions for the enterprise. A premier provider of enterprise storage
products for more than 20 years, MTI develops, integrates and
manufactures high-performance, high-availability storage products for
mid-range to Global 2000 companies. Headquartered in Anaheim, Calif.,
the company offers services and support in the U.S. and Europe and
complies with ISO 9002 quality system standards. MTI may be reached by
telephone at 800-999-9MTI (toll free) or 714-970-0300, fax:
714-693-2256, or e-mail: info@mti.com. Additional information is
available on the Web at www.mti.com .
MTI is a registered trademark and Continuous Access to Online
Information is a service mark of MTI Technology Corp. All other company,
brand or product names are registered trademarks or trademarks of their
respective holders.
This press release includes forward-looking statements that involve
risks and uncertainties. As a result, actual results may differ
materially from those described in any forward-looking statements,
including to but not limited to the Company's products and marketing
development plans, the future growth and acceptance of certain products
and services in the market, the changes in economic conditions in
various geographic markets, the Company's ability to retain and attract
experienced and qualified employees, and the rapid storage economic and
overall economic environment changes. Important factors that may cause
actual results to differ are set forth in the Company's periodic filings
with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission including its Form 10-K
for the year ended April 7, 2001.
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