Drobo: RAID for the rest of us

riredale wrote on 6/10/2007, 9:58 AM
There's a slick new product called Drobo just introduced that makes a data-redundant RAID setup really idiotproof. It's a little black box with slots for 4 naked hard drives of any capacity. The heart of the Drobo box is software that automatically sets up a RAID configuration from the drives you shove into it. Once it does its magic you can pull out a drive at any time and Drobo will automatically make sure that the data on that drive is still available. So your worries about a failed drive ruining your big video project are mitigated.

I don't know enough about RAID to know how doing a manual setup compares with just buying a Drobo box, but I suspect this thing will sell like hotcakes, since it completely automates all the confusing parts of a functioning RAID. The downside is that the box itself retails for $500. The other downside is that the throughput from Drobo is somewhat less than that of a single hard drive. It does look cool, though, with all sorts of flashing lights.

I also wonder if the hard drive vendors ever anticipated people handling their naked drives and the exposed printed-circuit cards on the bottom without any shield or protection at all.

Comments

farss wrote on 6/10/2007, 3:11 PM
For not much more I think I prefer my Thecus 5200.
Takes 5 drives.
Drives are in caddies.
Attaches to the network
Has a router, print server, a couple of USB ports and an eSATA port.
Decent drive cooling.
Takes a few minutes to setup.
Chienworks wrote on 6/10/2007, 3:36 PM
"I also wonder if the hard drive vendors ever anticipated people handling their naked drives and the exposed printed-circuit cards on the bottom without any shield or protection at all."

Yes. Consumer grade drives are shipped this way. So are professional grade drives for that matter. Buy a drive at Wal*Mart or OfficeMax and you'll get a naked drive with the circuit board exposed. The only thing protecting it is an antistatic bag, and you take it out of the bag to install it.

Now, presumably with the Drobo, users will touch the drives twice: once to install the drive when it's new and once to throw it away after it dies. That means that live drives will only be handled once ... just like when users install new drives in their PCs. People have been doing that successfully for decades. I doubt the Drobo will introduce any new difficulties in that respect.
riredale wrote on 6/10/2007, 6:14 PM
I had a Seagate 80GB drive a few years back that was encased front and back with a gorgeous stainless steel sheath. Come to think of it, it was also BY FAR the hottest-running drive I ever had. You couldn't hold a finger to it for more than a second or so.

It died last year. Wonder why.
DavidMcKnight wrote on 6/10/2007, 7:04 PM
I was on the beta team for this unit and it is indeed idiot proof. It works. Not having experience with RAID before, I was a little put off by the time it takes to rebuild the RAID after an outage, but that is true of any RAID setup. As a beta tester I have a promotional code I can give out for a discount of (I think) $25. Not a whole lot, but they did just drop the price on the thing, too.

This is good through the end of July or the end of September, I can't tell which (sorry) - enter REFDAVIDM as a coupon code during the checkout process.
bakerja wrote on 6/11/2007, 9:23 AM
That unit is USB2 only. Sure wish it had firewire.

JAB