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HP slams IBM-led storage alliance

HP: "We were invited, but we felt it was totally redundant, potentially confusing to customers, not to mention irrelevant..."

By Stephen Shankland

Published: 15 October 2002 10:30 BST

IBM, Hitachi, Sun Microsystems and Veritas will announce a new alliance today to advocate a standard to simplify storage system management.

The alliance is geared to support a standard called the Common Information Model (CIM), code-named Bluefin.

The standard aims to make it easier to manage special-purpose networks that are used to wire together storage systems. Management software is critical to making such networks function, but proprietary controls have made it difficult for one company's software to administer another company's hardware.

To join the alliance, members must commit to shipping CIM-compliant products in 2003, said Thomas Butler, vice president for product planning and marketing at Hitachi Data Systems. The alliance will work to ensure the standard does what it's set out to do, Butler said.

"The world is littered with standards no one uses," he added.

But Hewlett-Packard criticised the effort, saying it prefers to work through the Storage Networking Industry Association that initially developed the CIM standard.

"We were invited, but we felt it was totally redundant, potentially confusing to customers, not to mention irrelevant," said HP spokesman Mark Stouse. "HP doesn't see a need to create another alliance. Basically, it's a publicity ploy."

The alliance plans to invite EMC top join up before the alliance is formally announced, Butler said.

EMC didn't respond to a request for comment. HP, EMC, and Hitachi all are involved in patent infringement lawsuits involving storage hardware and software.

Despite the rancour, EMC, HP, IBM and others have been trading application programming interfaces, or APIs, the proprietary specifications for managing hardware.

Companies should move as quickly as possible away from the API exchanges, however, and embrace CIM, Butler argued.

"API swapping now is a short-term stopgap," he said.

Stephen Shankland writes for News.com

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