Storage Technology Corporation
Type | Public |
---|---|
NYSE: STK | |
Industry | Computer hardware, software |
Founded | 1969 |
Founders | Jesse Aweida, Juan Rodriguez, Thomas S. Kavanagh, Zoltan Herger |
Defunct | August 2005 |
Fate | Acquired by Sun Microsystems, which was later acquired by Oracle Corporation |
Headquarters | Louisville, Colorado |
Products | Data storage hardware and software, professional and support services |
Revenue | $2.2 billion USD (2004) |
Number of employees | ~7,000 (2004) |
Website | oracle |
Storage Technology Corporation (StorageTek or STK, earlier STC) was a data storage technology company headquartered in Louisville, Colorado.[1] New products include data retention systems, which it calls "information lifecycle management" (ILM).
Its remaining product line is now part of Oracle Corporation, and marketed as Oracle StorageTek, with a focus on tape backup equipment and software to manage storage systems.
History[]
In 1969 four former IBM engineers—, Juan Rodriguez, Thomas S. Kavanagh, and —founded the Storage Technology Corporation. The headquarters was in Louisville, Boulder County, Colorado.
In the 1970s, StorageTek launched its Disk Products division. After a failed attempt to develop an IBM-compatible mainframe, and an optical disk product line, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1984. Starting in 1987, new management invested in an automated tape library product line that "picked" tapes from a silo-like contraption with a robot arm. StorageTek emerged as a dominant player in that market.[2]
StorageTek acquired Documation (1980), (1989), Network Systems Corporation (1995), and (2005).
Storage Technology Corporation was officially renamed "StorageTek" in 1983.
Sun Microsystems[]
In June 2005, Sun Microsystems, Inc. announced it would purchase StorageTek for US$4.1 billion in cash, or $37.00 per share.[3] In August 2005, the acquisition was completed.
Oracle[]
On January 27, 2010, Sun was acquired by Oracle Corporation for US$7.4 billion.[4] The StorageTek product line was renamed "Oracle StorageTek".
Products[]
- Disk array: ST9990, ST9985, ST6540, ST6140, Iceberg, IBM RVA, SVA, BradeStor, FLX380, FLX280, FLX240, FLX210, D178, 9176, 9153, 9140, 9130
- Disk drives: STK 8000 SuperDisk, STK8350, STK8650, STK N2700
- Fibre Channel, SAS, RAID and SCSI HBAs.
- Tape drives: STC 2450, STC 2470, STC 3400, STC 3600, StorageTek 4670, StorageTek 4480, 4490, 9490, SD-3, 9840, T9840B, T9840C, T9840D, T9940, T9940B, T10000A, T10000B, T10000C, T10000D
- Tape drives (rebranded): LTO, SDLT, DLT
- Tape libraries: 4400, 9310, 9360, 9710, 9714, 9730, 9740, 9738, L20, L40, L80, L180, L700, L700e, L5500, SL500, SL3000, SL8500, SL150, SL4000
- Virtual tape libraries: VSM1, VSM2, VSM3, VSM4, VSM5, VSM6
- Printer : StorageTek (Documation) 5000
Product timeline[]
- 1970 - StorageTek releases its first product, the 2450/2470 tape drive.
- 1971 - StorageTek introduces the 3400 tape storage device.
- 1973 - StorageTek's disk division is founded.
- 1974 - StorageTek's first 3600 tape drive ships.
- 1975 - StorageTek ships the first 8000 Super Disk and announces the 8350 disk subsystem.
- 1978 - StorageTek develops a solid-state disk.
- 1984 - StorageTek develops the first intelligent disk.
- 1986 - StorageTek develops the first cached disk.
- 1987 - StorageTek develops tape automation and emerges from Chapter 11.
- 1994 - StorageTek introduces virtual disk, Iceberg.
- 1998 - StorageTek introduces Flexline disk arrays.
- 2001 - StorageTek introduces virtual networking.
- 2002 - StorageTek introduces BladeStore, a disk array based on ATA disk technology.
- 2003 - StorageTek introduces the EchoView data protection appliance, a disk-based appliance that eliminates the backup window.
- 2003 - StorageTek introduces the StreamLine SL8500 modular library system.
- 2012 - Oracle introduces the Streamline modular library system.
- 2013 - Oracle introduces the 8.5TB/252Mbit/s tape drive
References[]
- ^ Fundinguniverse.com: History of Storage Technology Corporation
- ^ Drew Robb (2005-12-29). "Tape Libraries Keep Stocking Shelves". Enterprise Storage. eWeek. Retrieved 2019-07-19.
In terms of revenue market share, Freeman Reports places StorageTek, which is now owned by Sun, in the lead with 38 percent.
- ^ "Buying StorageTek: Sun's last big gamble?". CNET News. 2 June 2005. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
- ^ "Oracle Completes Acquisition of Sun Microsystems". Associated Press. 27 January 2010. Retrieved 2019-07-19.
External links[]
- Computer storage companies
- Computer companies of the United States
- Hard disk drives
- Technology companies based in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Companies based in Redwood Shores, California
- American companies established in 1969
- Computer companies established in 1969
- 1969 establishments in California
- Sun Microsystems acquisitions
- Sun Microsystems hardware
- Oracle hardware