SILICON VALLEY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The LTO Program Technology Provider Companies (TPCs), Hewlett Packard Enterprise, International Business Machines Corporation and Quantum Corporation, today have publicly released the specifications of LTO Ultrium format generation 10, which is now available for licensing. LTO-10 delivers 30TB native capacity (up to 75TB compressed) with a native data rate of 400 MBps. LTO-10 offers optimized capacity for customers seeking long term retention storage, en
Related Questions
How does LTO-10's 30 TB native capacity and 400 MB/s data rate compare to competing tape and disk storage solutions?
Are there any supply‑chain or production capacity constraints that could delay shipments of LTO-10?
How will the launch of LTO-10 affect HPE's revenue forecasts and earnings guidance?
What is the expected market adoption rate for LTO-10 among enterprise customers?
Will the introduction of LTO-10 drive a measurable increase in demand for HPE, IBM, and Quantum's tape hardware and related services?
What pricing strategy will be used for LTO-10 licensing and hardware, and how might it impact profit margins?
How might the new generation influence the long‑term storage market dynamics and competitive positioning against emerging cloud storage providers?
What impact could the LTO-10 announcement have on the stock price of HPE and its peers in the data storage sector?
Will existing LTO‑9 customers upgrade to LTO‑10, and what cannibalization effect could this have on current product lines?
How does the partnership between HPE, IBM, and Quantum on LTO‑10 affect their collaborative market share versus rivals like Dell EMC and NetApp?