Advanced Computing in the Age of AI | Friday, April 19, 2024

DriveScale Secures $15 Million 

SUNNYVALE, Calif., May 19 -- DriveScale, the company that is pioneering flexible, scale-out computing for the enterprise using standard servers and commodity storage, today emerged from a three-year stealth development effort and announced $15 million in a Series A funding round led by Pelion Venture Partners with participation from Nautilus Venture Partners and Foxconn's Ingrasys. Carl Ledbetter, Managing Director at Pelion Venture Partners, and Connie Sheng, Founding Managing Director at Nautilus Venture Partners, join the Board of Directors as the first outside members, and the company named Scott McNealy, James Gosling, Phil Roussey and Ameet Patel as advisors.

"We believe the big data market, which is already strong, will accelerate as data analytics and IoT applications become ever more important. We know the technical problems that have to be solved to serve enterprise customers running production code in large infrastructure environments are profoundly difficult, so we wanted to find the strongest possible team, one with a world-class track record," said Carl Ledbetter, Managing Partner at Pelion Venture Partners. "Pelion was looking for the right technical and market approach in this area and the DriveScale architecture delivered the most flexible, highest performance and most robust system we found. When DriveScale showed us their product concept we knew we had a winning opportunity with the strongest team in the industry."

Addressing the Elephant in the Room: Scaling Hadoop and Big Data Workloads

Today, standard rack servers are the status quo in scale-out infrastructure. However, this equipment was not originally designed for big data processing platforms such as Hadoop and massively parallel computing environments.

Leveraging the DriveScale team's decades of experience in data center infrastructure design -- including the invention of several multibillion-dollar data center products, such as the Cisco UCS product line and Sun's UltraSparc workstations and workgroup servers -- its founders created a platform that provides enterprise companies with scale-out architecture previously only found in hyperscale organizations with practically limitless budgets such as Google or Facebook. By creating an architecture that is more flexible than the traditional scale-out data center (see today's product announcement), IT administrators and operators looking at their organization's data can make adjustments as they go, without hitting the common roadblocks found with standard commodity server assets.

"DriveScale first interested us because they clearly understood one of our core requirements, namely the desire to manage CPU and storage resources as separate pools. Unfortunately, storage and server technology upgrades move on two different timetables. Without a solution like DriveScale's, we are forced into storage refresh cycles that aren't strictly necessary and are very cumbersome," said Timothy Smith, SVP of Technical Operations at AppNexus. "Separating storage from compute allows us to upgrade or reallocate compute resources independent of storage. DriveScale significantly decreases the operations workload, as a result increasing the velocity of delivering new products and features to our customer base. We think that DriveScale is a promising solution that will also help us reduce wasted resources trapped in siloed clusters and thus contribute directly to our bottom line."

About DriveScale

DriveScale is leading the charge in bringing hyperscale computing capabilities to mainstream enterprises. Its composable data center architecture transforms rigid data centers into flexible and responsive scale-out deployments. Using DriveScale, data center administrators can deploy independent pools of commodity compute and storage resources, automatically discover available assets, and combine and recombine these resources as needed. The solution is provided via a set of on-premises and SaaS tools that coordinate between multiple levels of infrastructure. With DriveScale, companies can more easily support Hadoop deployments of any size as well as other modern application workloads. DriveScale is founded by a team with deep roots in IT architecture and that has built enterprise-class systems such as Cisco UCS and Sun UltraSparc. Based in Sunnyvale, California, the company was founded in 2013. Investors include Pelion Venture Partners, Nautilus Venture Partners and Ingrasys, a wholly owned subsidiary of Foxconn. For more information, visit www.drivescale.com or follow us on Twitter at @DriveScale_Inc.


Source: DriveScale

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