Banking Frontiers

Multiple storage options drive costs downwards

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It is a fact that the cost of hard drives is falling rapidly and the capacity is rising even faster. But is data storage really cheap? Developmen­ts in data storage have been amazing like Seagate producing 48 terabyte HAMR hard disk drives and Sony already selling quad-layer Blu-Ray disks with a capacity of 128GB. However, if disk storage capacities are rapidly increasing while the price per GB continues to fall, is storing business data cheap? And how do businesses prefer storing data these days - in the data center, in a private cloud, or in the public cloud?

Rahul Chopra of Clix Capital says storage costs have i ndeed gone up significan­tly in recent years especially with the rise of public clouds. However, they will continue to offer not only a variety of storage options but agility and flexibilit­y to set up and use them in real-time. “The speed with which businesses are generating and storing data, one needs to invest a lot for that kind of storage in a private data center. Also, there is an additional cost to maintain redundancy and disaster recovery. Therefore, public clouds will gain more and more popularity in this space. Moreover, security concerns with regard to storing critical and sensitive business data in the public clouds have gone down significan­tly with the way these services are maturing and offering adequate controls,” he says.

CLOUD CHANGES LANDSCAPE

Shreeraj Deshpande of Future Generali India Insurance too points out to the popularity of cloud computing, which he says has been a significan­t factor influencin­g the storage landscape in recent years. “Public cloud providers such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud have reshaped the storage market by offering highly-scalable architectu­res that are increasing­ly becoming an integral part of businesses’ overall storage strategies,” he says,

This trend, according to him, has impacted how organizati­ons store and process informatio­n, with common enterprise applicatio­ns such as CRM, collaborat­ion tools, and email now being hosted on cloud platforms. “So, with too many players starting to offer these unique propositio­ns, this has definitely benefited organizati­ons to negotiate more. We could say the cost of storing data is definitely on a decreasing trend,” he says.

Rahul Bhargava of InCred too finds that the cost of storing data is minimal and it is declining across all mediums. It has become inexpensiv­e, with cloud storage charges as low as a few rupees per GB)/moof data and it is highly unlikely that it will show up as a major

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