Open University's Knowledge Media Institute Expands SAN for Academic Computing

The Knowledge Media Institute (KMi), part of the Open University (OU), is upgrading its storage infrastructure to support the growing needs of academic researchers at the institute.

The KMi employs more than 90 people, including researchers, technologists, designers, and administrative staff, and that number is growing quickly, along with the number of academic projects the institute handles. To meet the increasing demands, the KMi needed to expand its storage area network (SAN) capacity.

The institute's IT administrators decided to upgrade to a new, scalable, high-performance platform, adopting the Dot Hill AssuredSAN 3720 8 gigabit fibre channel networked RAID array with 2.5-inch drive technology. The Dot Hill storage arrays support a variety of types of drives, including SAS, SATA, and SSD. This flexibility is important to the KMi owing to the diverse needs of its research projects, which use a mixture Web-based applications, databases, and high-performance computing (HPC) systems.

"Very often we have HPC requirements where the high-performance 2.5-inch SAS drives running over our fibre channel SAN deliver the performance we need, however most research projects have a three-year active life and a five-year data archive requirement so it makes more sense to utilise lower-cost, bulk SATA storage for this purpose," said Paul Alexander, systems and development Manager at KMi.

Another factor that guided the KMi to select the Dot Hill AssuredSAN 3720 was its ratio of performance density to the form factor of the drives, which maximizes the data center space. The full VMware certification of the AssuredSAN product was also an important consideration because the KMi uses virtualization extensively.

The Open University is the biggest university in the United Kingdom. It serves more than 260,000 undergraduate and graduate students and employs 7,000 tutors, 1,200 full-time faculty, and 3,500 support and administrative staff.

The Knowledge Management Institute was established in 1995 to support research and development at the Open University. The KMi supports research and development in the areas of cognitive and learning sciences, artificial intelligence and semantic technologies, and multimedia.

About the Author

Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • glowing brain, connected circuits, and abstract representations of a book and graduation cap on a light gray gradient background

    Snowflake Launches Program to Upskill 100,000 People in Data and AI

    Cloud data platform Snowflake is embarking on an effort to train and certify more than 100,000 users on its AI Data Cloud by 2027. The One Million Minds + One Platform program will provide Snowflake-delivered courses, training materials, and free access to Snowflake software, at no cost to learners.

  • two abstract humanoid figures made of interconnected lines and polygons, glowing slightly against a dark gradient background

    Microsoft Introduces Copilot Chat Agents for Education

    Microsoft recently announced Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat, a new pay-as-you-go offering that adds AI agents to its existing free chat tool for Microsoft 365 education customers.

  • hand touching glowing connected dots

    Registration Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education: Thriving in the Age of AI

    Tech Tactics in Education has officially opened registration for its May 7 virtual conference on "Thriving in the Age of AI." The annual event, brought to you by the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal, offers hands-on learning and interactive discussions on the most critical technology issues and practices across K–12 and higher education.

  • Three cubes of noticeably increasing sizes are arranged in a straight row on a subtle abstract background

    A Sense of Scale

    Gardner Campbell explores the notion of scale in education and shares some of his own experience "playing with scale" — scaling up and/or scaling down — in an English course at VCU.