Jedidiah Yueh, co-founder of Avamar, said the Avamar advantage comes from the fact that it's integrated within a data protection application. Axion de-dupes, protects and replicates the customer data and the related metadata so that, if data must be recovered, it can be done without the need to remount the backup server, which is the case with Data Domain, Yueh said. Axion also allows the taking and mounting of data snapshots.
Teter, who works with Avamar and Diligent Technologies, a Framingham, Mass.-based vendor of de-dupe storage appliances, said there's room in the market for both technologies.
However, despite having sold the Avamar solution to several customers, most of whom had already deployed EMC storage, Teter agreed with Slootman about the difficulty of displacing a customer's current data protection software.
"It's a challenge to go in and say to the customer, 'I've eliminated the need for Tivoli Storage Manager or NetBackup,' " he said.
Even so, Teter said the Avamar software is easy to work with, and backup and recovery functions can be accessed by clicking a few buttons on a screen.
"And Avamar is a great door-knocker for customers," he said. "We can go into any environment, whether Hewlett-Packard or EMC or IBM, and sell Avamar's backup and recovery solution. We might not have originally sold into those accounts, but this will get us in the door."
The Avamar technology also brings security and compliance technologies to customers, Lewis said. "Today, a lot of people still ship and store tapes," he said. "With Avamar, they can back up the data with encryption to the core and can use it in appliance-fashion to backup, restore and classify the data for compliance purposes."
EMC plans to keep the Avamar technology as a stand-alone product but will add some EMC intellectual property to it, Lewis said.
EMC's NetWorker data protection software, with which Avamar's Axion competes to some extent, has done well for EMC but could eventually be impacted to Axion, according to Lewis. "NetWorker has done well in its space," he said. "But what we saw coming in this space, and what we expected in this space, was disruptive technology. And Avamar is the disruptive technology."
EMC doesn't expect a fast shift from NetWorker and tape backups to Axion, Lewis said.
"Even though you know that something will be big or disruptive, it won't happen overnight," he said. "This is a way for us to shake up a market that has been in the doldrums -- and an area where people haven't been happy with for a decade. Tape backup is an area where no one is satisfied, not with the product, but with the process."
Yueh said Avamar has about 20 solution providers, all of which can join EMC's Velocity channel program next year.
Lewis said those partners won't need to be recertified for the Avamar products but will need to get certified for any other EMC products they may wish to sell.
EMC is the latest vendor to acquire de-dupe technology. Quantum last year acquired ADIC, which previously acquired de-dupe technology developer Rocksoft. Quantum is planning to unveil the first de-dupe products from Rocksoft in the near future.
