Fusion-io’s CEO and co-founder step down, new leadership looks to increase growth

Fusionio's CEO and cofounder step down, new leadership looks to increase growth

Times are a-changin’ for Salt Lake City-based Fusion-io, as the company’s CEO David Flynn has resigned alongside co-founder and CMO Rick White. It seems that both are stepping away in order to “pursue entrepreneurial investing activities,” leaving the act of running one of the world’s leading flash storage makers for Mr. Shane Robison. Effective immediately, Robison will be knighted chairman, chief executive officer and president, offering up over 30 years of experience in prior roles for AT&T, Cadence Design Systems, HP and Apple.

The outfit’s stock price hasn’t fared so well in the shuffle, and it seems that it’s once again battling murmurs that a sale could be on the horizon. Combating that sentiment, Robison was quoted by Bloomberg as saying that a sale “is not my focus.” Rather, he’s hoping to “grow the company and build on what [it] has.” Here’s hoping it all pans out — the world most certainly doesn’t need one less company fighting for the death of the conventional hard drive.

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Source: Fusion-io

Fusion-io Outs 1.6TB ioFX PCI-Express SSD

Fusion-io-Outs-1.6TB-ioFX-PCI-Express-SSD

Fusion-io has recently announced a new storage capacity to its ioFX PCI-Express SSD line-up by announcing the 1.6TB model. Designed to meet the needs of small to medium-sized businesses, enterprises clients and system integrators, the 1.6TB model is equipped with MLC NAND Flash memory chips, a PCI-Express 2.0 x4 (x4 physical) Bus interface and promises to deliver read and write speeds of up to 1.4GB/s and 1.1GB/s, respectively. The 1.6TB model will be available in Summer 2013 for unannounced price yet. [Fusion-io]

Fusion-io brings Fusion ioScale SSD to small, speedy server clusters

Fusionio brings 32TB Fusion ioScale SSDs to sma server clusters

Fusion-io has made a name for its Fusion ioDrive solid-state drives by selling them to the largest of enterprises — the sort that crave thousands of servers. Not everyone wants that level of computing muscle, though, which is why the pro-grade storage firm is now selling the Fusion ioScale to a much wider audience. Cloud service hosts and other, smaller companies just have to buy a (relatively) paltry 100 or more of the PCI Express-based drives, which include both slim 1.6TB and full-size, 3.2TB versions. Neither will be cheap for datacenters when prices start at $3.89 per gigabyte, although Fusion-io is vowing better deals for those buying in buik. We also suspect that the time saved by moving to fast flash storage could be worthwhile in itself.

Continue reading Fusion-io brings Fusion ioScale SSD to small, speedy server clusters

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Source: Fusion-io