Updated: July 9, 2020 (July 23, 2012)

  Analyst Report

Storage Spaces Shipping with Next Windows

My Atlas / Analyst Reports

1,145 wordsTime to read: 6 min
Wes Miller by
Wes Miller

Wes Miller analyzes and writes about Microsoft’s security, identity management, and systems management technologies. Before joining Directions on Microsoft, Wes... more

A new Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 feature named Storage Spaces enables a group of inexpensive commodity disks to appear as a single disk, which Microsoft refers to as storage virtualization. The feature can provide fault tolerance and could prove especially useful for small or medium businesses deploying Windows Server 2012 that are unable to invest in network-attached storage, or large-scale service providers looking to reduce the cost required with complex storage technologies. With Windows 8, Storage Spaces will appeal to highly technical consumers who build their own PCs. Storage Spaces also provides an interesting opportunity for hardware partners to make complementary disks or enclosures. However, as the feature is, it should be used cautiously until proven reliable.

Storage Spaces Focused on Cost

Storage Spaces is likely to be most appealing to small and medium businesses and technical consumers looking to save money by using inexpensive disks to enable significant storage capacity. Storage Spaces uses commodity disks grouped together into a storage pool, which the Windows OS presents to users and applications as a single disk that can contain one or more volumes. (For a comparison of a storage pool with a traditional disk-based storage, see the illustration “Understanding Storage Spaces“.)

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