Promise For Mac
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Higher resolution (4K, 5K, 6K, 8K) ingest and capture means storage capacity requirements will continue to grow and higher performance technologies are needed. These larger file sizes mean rendering, compositing, coloring, and editing require significant bandwidth, and can increase workload productivity time spans - making it hard to meet deadlines. As rich media continues to shift towards higher resolution images and video, customers must deploy storage systems that are equipped to handle the delivery of video streaming and content distribution of media at higher bandwidth. And let’s not forget that this growing amount of content will need to be backed up and archived in different tiers depending on access requirements for the most efficient data lifeycle management. Houses of Worship seek to find ways to broaden sermons to wider audiences, but may have constraints in production staff, or storage bandwidth issues for housing or streaming such media.
Further, weekly sermons, training, worship, conferences, or concerts all require content creation and delivery technologies. Promise also addresses the different needs of different size churches, from a small, community-based house of worship, to nationally recognized “Megachurches.” Add in the growing popularity of web streaming as an exciting, cost-effective way to reach more parishioners, and you have a market as unique and varied, as there are religions!
For all your rich media needs, the Pegasus2 and VTrak A-Class offer flexible solutions for single users, multi-users, and multi-viewers. Sports venues at different locations require a means to capture, catalogue, edit and distribute footage for content management. Moving game to game requires mobile truck staffing and portable cameras. At the same time, higher resolution sports require more storage, but most portable storage solutions don’t have the speed and capacities necessary. Pegasus2 offers solutions starting at portable 2TB SSD and 4TB HDD capacities and up to 48TB desktop configurations that can be transported in mobile trucks. More importantly, these products feature the speed and performance you need. As sports footage is increasingly shot in HD and 4K for animations, effects, and slow motion replay studio processing bandwidth will be severely impacted, in terms of time and delivery.
Promise For Children Partnership
VTrak A-Class is optimized for high bandwidth video editing and can easily double the bandwidth of an editing studio. Classrooms are increasingly using video for education capture and curriculum. They require small-scale storage that can be managed by classrooms. And of course, as budgets are always an issue, all solutions must be both cost-effective and reliable. The Pegasus2 solutions are portable for individual desktop or classroom use. For more robust needs, the VTrak A-Class can be shared in a classroom setting as a digital locker.
Now that more and more classrooms are online, infrastructure is needed to support that curriculum made online for more student access. The VTrak A-Class can scale out to store rich media content with student permission access control. This access can be onsite or remote. Today's high-end camera are becoming increasingly compact for mobility. Thus, portability is now a key consideration when it comes to on-set or remote footage capture. The Pegasus2 M4 HDD/SSD provides the most portable Thunderbolt 2 solution – and it can fit in the palm of your hand. SANLink2 16G FC creates direct connectivity from Thunderbolt 2 desktops or laptops to VTrak x30 FC storage systems.
Similarly SANLink2 10GBaseT provides a MacPro or HP z800 workstation direct connectivity not only to 10G storage, but directly to 10G Ethernet. SANLink2 10G SFP+ is for direct connectivity to 10G that require even further distances such as remote branches.
Tweet Share Whatsapp Email Brand New Thunderbolt NAS for 2018 – The Promise Atlas S8+ 8-Bay for Mac Since the release of the QNAP Thunderbolt NAS series 2 years ago, we have seen a growing trend of network attached storage devices being used in photo and video editing post-production. Of course, QNAP really has dominated the market in this field, not only because of their strong reputation in NAS, but also due to them adopting Thunderbolt 2 and Thunderbolt 3 connectivity, a widely popular port with the Mac community.
The result is that QNAP occupies a large percentage of the Mac NAS server community. Until now they were the only company who released thunderbolt NAS devices, with most thinking they would be the only ones (due to ownership and/or development of the technology). However today we want to announce a big, BIG change in the world of both DAS (direct attached storage) and Thunderbolt 3, with the release of the new Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS for Mac and Windows. This is the first thunderbolt NAS from a company other than QNAP. Thunderbolt has grown so popular that it isn’t hugely surprising that another brand has challenged this prestigious area. Of all the companies that would attempt it, Promise Technology is a good choice, as they have an already existing dominant thunderbolt 3 reputation (Pegasus 3). It still remains to be seen if the Promise Atlas S8+ will rival that of the QNAP TVS-1282T3 or TS-453BT3 NAS, but let’s take a moment to discuss what this new thunderbolt NAS can do Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS for Mac and Windows Promise Atlas S8+ is designed to be a combination of easy shared storage for small groups working with the added benefit of hi-res video-editing and production workflows over thunderbolt for 4K editing and RAW production.
Thanks to optional cards to choose from, it allows Thunderbolt 3 live access or 10Gbe network connectivity (providing varying levels of speed access) with iSCSI support. Featuring an intel i5 Quad Core and 16GB of DDR4 memory, a fast local user interface, several capacity options (factoring RAID considerations) and simple GUI make it perfect to centralize your workflow, provide many users simultaneous access, share finished work and backup your content to multiple sources to a single location. This is further backed up with cloud-based access too with popular platforms like Google Drive, OneDrive and Dropbox synchronization. Finally, Promise provides fully populated Atlas S8+ units with Enterprise-class 3-year warranty and 24/7 web/chat support. Key Features of the Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS The Promise Atlas S8+ features a number of key hardware and software factors that will make comparisons between it and the QNAP Thunderbolt 3 NAS inevitable. Originally I would have thought that perhaps Synology NAS would have been the first brand to release a Thunderbolt NAS to rival that of QNAP.
However, Synology has been pretty open with the network-only attitude to their systems and unwilling to adapt the architecture to adopt Thunderbolt connectivity. But for a thunderbolt pedigree storage brand like Promise to adopt NAS in their existing range is both a great deal easier and a logical choice for photo and video editors who use thunderbolt speeds to edit external storage, but need a NAS to effectively distribute their product. The hardware and design of the Promise S8+ Atlus could be compared to that of the first generation QNAP thunderbolt Nas, the TVS-871T.
Promise Mac Storage
However, this new Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS features Thunderbolt 3 or 10Gbe as you see fit as a means of connectivity. It still remains to be seen how the promise Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS will fair with rivalling QNAP NAS units. When will the Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS be released? One of the most regular complaints people make about the QNAP Thunderbolt NAS range is regarding read/write speeds over Thunderbolt. Despite providing thunderbolt direct attached access to the storage media in the NAS, it is not the traditional plug-n-play method of connectivity you associate it thunderbolt storage and is a method of connectivity known as thunderbolt-over-IP. It means that your storage is connected with an IP.
This is still very straightforward and only a little annoying the first time, but the result of this is that often connections over thunderbolt on a QNAP NAS are noticeably lower than that of a traditional thunderbolt 3 DAS, such as the Promise Pegasus or on Drobo 5D3. Now this new thunderbolt NAS is being designed by a brand chiefly associated with DAS storage, the hope is that we shall see significantly higher read-write speeds than those available on the QNAP thunderbolt 3 NAS.
However, it is still too early to say. Will the Promise Atlas S8+ Thunderbolt 3 NAS feature both Thunderbolt 3 and 10Gbe? PromiseThunderboltt 3 RAID storage is notoriously one of the most expensive options out there for budding photo and video editors looking for reliable RAID storage. However, in fairness, it is worth mentioning that they have the best warranty and hardware support of almost any DAS brand available. Likewise, most Promise thunderbolt RAID storage devices arrive pre-populated with hard drive media and it is important to factor this into the cost of your thunderbolt solution, to avoid comparisons between devices without hard drive media (though a part-populated like the Buffalo TeraStation NAS range would be a welcome option).