The appliance had an iSCSI interface using 10 Gigabit Ethernet and used serial ATA disks as well as solid-state drives.[6] In April 2012, StorSimple announced the replacement of its 2U 5010 (2.5 TB raw capacity) and 7010 (5 TB raw) models: the 5020 with 2 TB of raw capacity, the 7020 (4 TB), 5520 (10 TB) and the 4U 7520 (20 TB).[7]
On October 16, 2012, Microsoft agreed to acquire StorSimple.[1][8] It was finalized by November 15.[9]
Integration
After acquisition, Microsoft integrated StorSimple into its Azure product suite and refreshed the hardware, launching the 8100 and 8600 on-premise fixed-configuration storage arrays in 2014. The 8100 offered between 10 TB and 40 TB locally depending on data compression and data de-duplication and up to 200 TB maximum capacity inclusive of the Azure cloud storage. The 8600 offered 40 TB to 100 TB locally and 500 TB inclusive of cloud storage.[10] Like their predecessors, the appliances combined solid state and standard disk drives.[11] A virtualised version of the platform, running on a virtual machine in the Azure cloud, was initially marketed as the 1100 then re-branded as the 8010. In 2015 this was replaced by the 8020, offering 64 TB maximum, compared to its predecessor's 30 TB.[12]
Recognition
Gartner Research "Cool Vendor in Storage Technologies, 2010"[13]
Dow Jones/VentureWire "Top 50 Startups to Watch” 2010 (only cloud storage on list)[14]
Most Promising Cloud Solution at the UP Cloud Computing Conference 2010[15]
Storage Magazine Gold Award for 2011 Product of the Year, storage systems category[16]