Data Storage Trends and Directions
Transcription
Data Storage Trends and Directions
Data Storage Trends and Directions Tom Coughlin Coughlin Associates & Peripheral Research Corporation Outline • • • • • The difficulty of predictions Drivers for storage growth Technology growth Pricing trends Drive growth areas and drive/component vendors • Mobile storage growth • Network storage, tape, optical storage • Industry Status and Summary The Aberrant Mirror • An aberrant mirror gives a distorted view of the world, we draw an analogy to our always inaccurate view of the future. • Correction of this aberration occurs over time as possibilities become certainties “Time is nature’s way of preventing everything from happening at once.” Graffito US Economy 1998 to 2001 “The real Y2K problem” (1) …and 2001 is worse!!! US Economy 1998 to 2001 “The real Y2K problem” (2) In Q2 2001: • Investment in computers and peripherals dropped 30.1% (further drop in Q3) • Business Investment declined 14.6%, software and equipment investment fell 15.1% (worse in Q3) • GDP growth increase was only 0.2% from Q1 2001 (Q3 -0.4%, negative growth) Drive Projections History (19972000 PRC) 300 Drive Shipments (M) 280 260 240 220 200 180 1997 Proj 1998 Proj 1999 Proj 2000 Proj 2001 Proj Actual 160 140 120 100 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Desktop Drive Average Components/Drive Ratios (Source: IDC May 2001) 4 Heads/Drive Disks/Drive Components/Drive 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 History of PRC Head Volume Forecasts (Source: PRC 1997-2000) Units (M) 2000 1998 Forecast 1999 Forecast 2000 Forecast Actual 1500 1000 500 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 History of PRC Disk Volume Forecasts (Source: PRC 1997-August 2001) 900 1997 800 1998 1999 2000 Units (M) 700 2001E Actual 600 500 400 300 200 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Drivers for Storage Growth • Growth in digital information from faster processors and the digitization of human content (from literature, audio, and video to our genes) • Ever lower cost of digital data storage • Increasing availability of high data rate access • New applications inspired by low cost that generate even more digital information Hans Moravec, “When will computer hardware match the human brain?” Vol. 1, March 1998, Journal of Transhumanism GROWTH OF MOBILE INTERNET DEVICES TO 2004 25 20 Millions Handheld Companions Smartphones x 10 15 Car Clients Digital STBs 10 Video Game Players 5 0 2000 Source: IDC 2001 2002 2003 2004 Residential Broadband Projections $BILLIONS 150 Terrestrial Wireless Satellite Cable Modem xDSL 100 50 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Wireless 0 0.07 0.26 0.85 1.54 2.56 4 5.95 8.34 11.16 Satellite 0.03 0.07 0.2 0.65 1.9 4.58 10.49 18.48 27.64 39.62 Cable Modem 0.57 1.52 4.24 8.54 13.72 19.99 26.86 34.33 41 46.78 0.2 0.69 2.2 5.332 9.93 15.57 21.45 27.2 33 38.49 xDSL Source: Pioneer Consulting, "Global Broadband Access Markets: xDSL, Cable Modems and the Threat from Broadband Satellite, Wireless and All-Optical Solutions,” Executive Summary, October 1998; Centennial Investments NON-PC REMOVABLE STORAGE DEVICE OPPORTUNITY FORECAST (UNITS MILLIONS) APPLICATION 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 HANDHELD COMP. 9.6 DIGITAL STILL CAM. 7.9 CAMCORDERS 15.7 DIGITAL AUDIO 4.0 HAND HELD GPS 3.7 SET-TOP BOX 24.8 INDUST. NETWORK 3.0 SUB-TOTAL 68.7 DIGITAL CELL 326.1 TOTALS 394.8 13.3 12.3 16.1 7.8 6.3 33.3 3.1 92.2 421.1 513.3 18.1 24.3 17.9 22.8 16.3 16.6 13.3 19.1 10.9 13.8 43.3 52.1 3.2 3.3 123.0 152.0 532.5 585.0 655.5 737.0 29.8 27.9 16.8 24.2 16.7 58.9 3.4 177.7 622.0 799.7 World Wide Storage Capacity of Disk Memory (In PetaBytes, Source: Disk/Trend plus projection to 2004) 90000 80000 70000 Mega: 106 Giga: 109 50000 Tera: 1012 40000 Peta: 1015 Exa: 1018 Zetta: 1021 Yotta: 1024 60000 30000 20000 10000 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Technology Growth Areas and Concerns • Data coding, compression, and error correction: – How to deal with reducing SNR – Variations for niche markets--e.g. video storage – Implications of perpendicular recording • Servo – Time for servo writing, self servo writing – Higher TPI requirements • Areal density growth – Capital investments needed, particularly for head development – Flight of talent to more lucrative fields may limit creativity available to industry – Changes from longitudinal to perpendicular recording 17 19 17 19 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 1 Market Penetration (%) Time 20000 15000 10000 5000 Time 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 0 1 • Is there a finite technology pool or limited resources in technology growth? • Or could technology growth be ever exponential? • Limitations could be economic rather than technical. Population Growth Growth Models for Technology AREAL DENSITY RACE (Source: PRC, August 2001) COMPANY SIZE PRODUCT MXTR 96147U8 3.5 IBM 40GV 3.5 IBM 1.0 MXTR DM80 3.5 QTM FBAS 3.5 QTM ATLASIII 3.5 MXTR 531DX 3.5 TOSHIBA MK1002 2.5 IBM 2.5 MXTR 3.5 TOSHIBA MK4018 2.5 DEMONSTRATION SEAGATE R-R/KOMAG FUJITSU R-R/KOMAG/HTCH/GUZIK FUJITSU CAPACITY AREAL (GB) DENSITY Gb/in2 61.4 11.3 40.0 14.3 1.0 15.2 81.0 14.7 80.0 14.7 73.4 179 15.0 22.5 10.0 22.4 30.0 25.7 40.0 28.3 40.0 35.1 45.0 50.0 56.0 63.2 106.5 kTPI kBPI Time 27.3 35.0 35.0 34.0 35.4 40.0 46.0 412 415 435 402 417 448 489 54.0 56.8 524 625 3/00 3/00 6/00 7/00 7/00 10/00 2/01 3/01 3/01 6/01 6/01 70.0 90.0 82.7 105 142 640 552 678 600 750 3/00 3/00 6/00 10/00 8/01 AREAL DENSITY PROGRESSION TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATIONS / PRODUCTS (Source: PRC, 2001) 120 Areal Density (Gb/in2) 100 80 60 40 20 0 Q1 2000 Q2 2000 Q3 2000 Q4 2000 Q1 2001 Q2 2001 Q3 2001 TECHNOLOGY PRODUCT Average Desktop Drive Prices vs. Time (Sources: Disktrend 1999 and PRC 2001) 230 210 Ave. Desktop Price 3 per. Mov. Avg. (Ave. Desktop Price) 190 Price ($) 170 150 130 110 90 70 50 1H 2H 1H 2H 1H 2H 1H 2H 1H 2H 1H 2H Q1 Q2 Q3 95 95 96 96 97 97 98 98 99 99 00 00 01 01 01 DISK DRIVE UNITS & AVERAGE SALES PRICES 1999-2001 (Source: PRC 2001) MFG. Q3 99 UNIT/$ MAXTOR 5.8/$100 QUANTUM Q1 00 UNIT/$ Q2 00 UNIT/$ Q3 00 UNIT/$ Q4 00 UNIT/$ Q1 01 UNIT/$ Q2 01 UNIT/$ Q3 01 UNIT/$ 6.8/$102 6.6/$105 6.5/$102 6.5/$95 7.4/$98 6.7/$94 12.1/$85 12.5/$82 6.9/$111 8.7/$102 8.6/$105 8.2/$105 9.0/$92 6.8/$104 6.6/NA SEAGATE 9.7/$161 10.3/$149 10.5/$140 10.3/$140 11.6/$141 10.6/NA 11.2/NA 10.6/NA 11.2/NA WEST. DIG. 3.4/$121 5.3/$106 5.1/$86 6.0/$88.9 5.3/NA UNITS IN MILLIONS Q4 99 UNIT/$ 5.5/$98 5.2/$91 5.8/$92 5.4/$82 Disk vs. Drive Shipment Projections 500,000 Total Drives 450,000 Total Disks Units (M) 400,000 350,000 300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 WW Disk Production Capacity Estimates vs. Disk Shipment Projections 640 590 Capacity Disks (M) 540 490 440 Shipments 390 340 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Average Disk and Head Prices 12.00 11.00 Disk Price ($) 10.00 9.00 8.00 Heads 7.00 Disks 6.00 5.00 1998 1999 2000 2001 Year 2002 2003 2004 Q2 2001 Disk Drive Company Market Share Samsung 5.7% WD 12.6% Fujitsu 11.0% IBM 14.6% Others 6.4% Seagate 22.7% Maxtor 27.0% DISK DRIVE SHIPMENTS BY SUPPLIER (UNITS MILLIONS) 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Q3-99 Q4-99 Q1-00 Q2-00 Q3-00 Q4-00 Q1-01 Q2-01 SEAGATE QUANTUM MAXTOR W.D. IBM MAX/QTM Q1 2001 Drive Company Volume vs Market Sector 14 12 Volume (M) 10 8 6 4 2 0 Mobile Maxtor Seagate Desktop IBM WD Fujitsu Enterprise Samsung Toshiba Hitachi Q2 2001 Head Company Market Share (Source: PRC, 2001) Others 14% Seagate 25% Fujitsu 9% Read-Rite 13% TDK/SAE 18% IBM 21% Q2 2001 Media Company Market Share Seagate 22% Others Mitsubishi 9% Chemical 6% MaxMedia 6% IBM 21% Komag 14% SDK 6% Fujitsu Fuji 8% 8% INDUSTRY STATUS • • • • • NETWORK STORAGE MARKETS TEMPORARILY STAGNANT DUE TO IT RECESSION BUT GROWTH PRESSURE IS INTENSE (OPPORTUNITY FOR LOW COST NETWORK STORAGE) SLOWNESS IN P.C. MARKETS DRIVE AND COMPONENT PRICING PRESSURES HAVE LESSENED, ESPECIALLY FOR HEADS CONSUMER ELECTRONICS AND MOBILE MARKETS GROWING UNIT FORECASTS SHOULD INCREASE AFTER 2001 Disk drive growth will be primarily in mobile storage, network storage and new applications. The traditional PC market seems to be near saturation. 140 120 Units (M) 100 80 60 40 20 0 2000 2001 PC Mobile 2002 Network 2003 New Apps. 2004 Average Mobile Electronic Product Price Projections 700 Digital Cameras MP3 Player MPEG-2 Player Handheld Computer GPS/Map/Phone Average Price ($) 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1999 2000 2001E 2002E 2003E 2004E 2005E Source: Projections based on Intelect Market Tracking for Digital Cameras and PDAs , 2000 400 16 350 14 300 12 250 10 200 8 20% 2-Sided Capacity 150 6 100 4 50 2 0 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2-Sided Capacity (GB) Prices ($) Microdrive Price Projections at 20% Gross Margin and 2-Sided Capacity IBM MICRODRIVE MARKETS SHIPMENT EST. (UNITS 000) 1999 30.0 2000 188.0 2001 600.0 APPLICATIONS: 40% THINK-PAD, LAPTOP, P.C. APPLICATIONS 60% DIGITAL CAMERA CAMERA MODELS: 19 TOTAL CANON-4 CASIO- 3 KODAK-2 HITACHI- 2 FUJI- 3 SANGYO-2 MINOLTA-3 * OTHER POTENTIAL “1” INCH DRIVE SUPPLIERS: HALO, MARQLIN, QUANTUM, TOSHIBA,SEAGATE, OTHERS Compact flash memory is expected to show strong unit growth and be a significant source of revenue as mobile data storage applications grow. (IDC, 2000) 140 7 Units (M) Revenue ($B) Units (M) 100 6 5 80 4 60 3 40 2 20 1 0 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 Figure 4C-1 2003 2004 Revenue ($B) 120 Disk drive arrays are expected to show strong revenue growth as are storage network systems such as SAN and NAS. Revenue ($B) (Source: Peripheral Concepts, Inc. 2001) 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Arrays SAN NAS 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Tape drive areal density growth is around 30% annually, much less than disk drive >100% per year areal density growth. This may make tape systems vulnerable to disk drive based storage. 100000 1000 100 AIT (GB) DDS (GB) DLT LTO 30% CAGR 60% CAGR 120% CAGR 10 1 19 95 19 96 19 97 19 98 19 99 20 00 20 01 20 02 20 03 20 04 20 05 20 06 Tape Capacity (GB) 10000 As low cost disk drive storage decreases in price it will offer increasing competition to tape systems for back-up applications. 1000 $/GB 100 10 Tape Drives Tape Drive + 100 Media Ghetto RAID 1 Tape Media 0.1 IDE Drives 0.01 1996 1998 2000 Tape Drive + 100 Media 2002 IDE Drive 2004 2006 Ghetto RAID Optical storage technologies show moderate growth over the next few years driven primarily by content distribution and copying of audio and video content. (Source: PRC 2001, units Millions) 2000 2001 2002 2003 CD-ROM 82.9 56.4 30.2 18.6 DVD-ROM 30.1 60.3 92.8 107.3 CD/DVD RW 19.0 25.4 29.8 33.7 R/W < 4 GB 1.9 1.6 1.3 1.0 .2 .3 .8 143.9 154.4 161.4 R/W > 4 GB TOTALS 133.9 Flash and disk drives show strongest projected sales growth. Tape and floppy units are in decline 300 UNITS (MILLIONS) 250 200 150 100 50 0 2000 RIGID DISK DRIVE 2001 OPTICAL DRIVES 2002 TAPE DRIVES 2003 FLEXIBLE DRIVES 2004 FLASH MEMORY SUMMARY • • • • • • 2001 WILL BE A DOWN YEAR FOR STORAGE AFTER H1 2002, STORAGE DEMANDS WILL CONTINUE TO INCREASE (ESPECIALLY FOR LOW COST NETWORK STORAGE, MOBILE AND NEW APPLICATIONS) SOME ADDITIONAL CONSOLIDATION AND STRATEGIC DIFFERENTIATION (SUCH AS FUJITSU’S DECISION TO GET OUT OF THE DESKTOP DRIVE MARKET) AREAL DENSITIES WILL CONTINUE TO INCREASE, MAYBE AT A SLOWER RATE WITHIN 2 YEARS MORE COMPONENT INTEGRATION WILL BE REQUIRED, FEW MERCHANT VENDORS WILL REMAIN DISK DRIVES WILL ENCROACH FURTHER ON TAPE MARKET Data Storage getting more mature? “Things are more like they are now than they ever were before.” Dwight Eisenhower
Similar documents
Reflections on a Aberrant Mirror
QTM FBAS QTM ATLASIII MXTR 531DX TOSHIBA MK1002 IBM MXTR
More information