All-flash storage array vendor Pure Storage Monday unveiled a new architecture called FlashBlade designed specifically for unstructured data. The Mountain View, Calif.-based storage vendor also ...
Pure Storage already lets enterprises buy new controllers for their flash arrays by subscription. Now it’s offering a way to trade in old flash media when new and improved versions come out. The ...
Pure Storage Inc. is expanding its product portfolio with three new flash arrays and a set of software features designed to mitigate the impact of ransomware attacks. The company announced the ...
“We‘re not just going cheap and deep. We don’t want a lot of gimmicks to deliver QLC, such as the use of storage-class memory as a cache. We get rid of the gimmicks to deliver both performance and ...
Pure Storage on Tuesday rolled out updates to its FlashArray//C product, extending quad-level cell (QLC) flash technology end-to-end. The all-QLC storage array is built on Pure's DirectFlash ...
Pure Storage is doubling down on NVMe, a specification designed to speed up storage throughput, and offering a enterprise all-flash array with NVMe. The array, dubbed FlashArray//X, includes Purity ...
Enterprise storage is a long-term bet. Pure Storage, a growing maker of all-flash arrays, is reshuffling the deck on that gamble in a way that might save IT departments time and money. Pure’s plan is ...
Pure Storage Inc. today announced an upgraded version of its FlashArray//C storage system based on QLC flash, a type of solid-memory that isn’t yet broadly deployed in data centers. The system is ...
Pure Storage threw itself a party in Las Vegas two weeks ago, where the company announced a slew of new offerings, along with significant updates to some existing ones. Pure is (interestingly, for ...
In this storage vendor profile, we look at Pure Storage, which among all the big six storage players comes closest to having been a startup in recent times. This means that Pure Storage joined the ...
Pure Storage already lets enterprises buy new controllers for their flash arrays by subscription. Now it’s offering a way to trade in old flash media when new and improved versions come out. The ...