02/19/2008, 12:45pm, EST
Tuesday, February 19th
Apple quietly kills Xserve RAID
Despite today's unveiling of the Xsan 2 file system, Apple quietly discontinued the Xserve RAID platform, with any references to the hard drive system absent from the online store. The only mention of enterprise-level RAID hard drive products is that of the Promise VTrak system, for which Apple is also selling a number of service parts as well. The VTrak RAID systems range from 4.8TB to 16TB, and are configured with either SATA or SAS drives.
It is unclear if Apple is making another approach to the RAID system, or if it is just simplifying its offerings.

Filed under: industry, networking, Apple
Other story tags: RAID, Xserve, discontinued
,
, 14
,
,
,
,
,

subscribe to comments
for this article
There's really no need to worry about the Xserve. It's needed for running OS X in a server-based environment. Xserve RAID was merely storage and was already dependent on OS X server.
The Xserve, running OS X, will continue to grow and be enhanced. It's a major strategy for Apple and is not nearly as expendable as the RAID system.
Obviously some comments here from people who haven't used one. mgpalma is right, a little troublesome. If Apple is trying to make it in IT then they have to handle these situation a little better.