Home  |  Newsletter | Feedback | Advertise - Online  | Help

Google
Web dqindia.com
Search by issue  | Sitemap

• Visit pcquest.com to know all about the business benefits of IT infrastructure outsourcing • Ad : Play and Plug ERP by IBM

 
Home > Indepth

On A Song
One of India's largest and most well-known music archive houses in India, was plagued with the problem of storing and digitizing songs. It was on the lookout for a storage solution provider who could help manage all that data
Monday, October 30, 2006
Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter

Saregama India Ltd, formerly known as The Gramophone Company of India Ltd, started operations in India in 1901 as the first overseas branch of Electrical and Musical Industries Ltd, London. As one of India's largest and best-known music recording company, it owns the largest music archives in India and one of the biggest in the world. The company has regional offices in 4 metros and total staff strength of 750 people. Saregama's music is marketed in the overseas markets through its two subsidiaries, namely RPG Global Music and Saregama Plc. The company produces every kind of record formats: Music Cassettes, Compact Discs, VCDs, DVDs.

Being the largest music recording company has not come easy for Saregama. With a huge repository of songs since 100 years meant the company faced a challenge in terms of storing and managing around two lakh digitized audio songs and were looking at a storage solution which would help them consolidate the data (digitized songs) and was scalable. “Since we had a lot of intellectual property assets in terms of the songs we required a lot of storage space and this posed a big problem for us since getting adequate storage space was cumbersome,” Saregama's IT manager Arnab Bhattacharya said.

Arnab Bhattacharya, IT manager, Saregama

Case File: Saregama

Bottlenecks

  • Lack of sufficient storage space for storing song

Solution

  • EMC CLARiiON CX300 with EMC NS 502G (EMC NS Series/Gateway NAS solution)

  • Saregama went for 16 TB capacity in Sep 2005 and stored 1,60,000 digitized songs

Key Benefits

  • Consolidation of storage

  • Easy accessibility and manageability

  • Scalability and investment protection

  • Security of information

As the stockpile of songs increased, the worries for the company increased manifold and the company started looking at various options for digitizing format. “We did some benchmarking and decided to consult the experts for solutions,” he said. The company was looking at three vendors primarily and EMC India was one of the vendors.

But the management was also equally concerned about handling the issue of financial constraints.

Like most other enterprises, Saregama was plagued with the problem of obsolescence of technology as up gradation to a new technology from an old one meant additional expenditure which meant burden on its budget. “One would also need a proper data center which again meant investing money in setting it up,” Bhattacharya added. Fortunately for Saregama, the company's top management was extremely IT savvy “and was equally convinced that the IT assets needed proper protection so there was no problem in getting an approval from them.”

A huge repository of songs over the last 100 years, it meant challenge in terms of storing and managing around two lakh digitized audio songs. The storage solution lead to consolidate data (digitized songs) and be scalable.

The management then zeroed in on EMC India for solving its data storage problem. Bhattacharya attributes the choice to several factors, comfort and support being the primary ones. “We chose EMC because of the comfort factor as well as the commercial side. For us support was a major concern and the feedback we received from various companies did the trick and given the configuration and rates we finalized on EMC,” he said.

The company opted for EMC CLARiiON CX300 (mid-tier networked storage system) with EMC NS 502G (EMC NS Series/Gateway NAS solution). “They went for 16 TB capacity in Sep 2005 and  initially stored 1,60,000 digitized songs on this. Later, in May 2006 they went for additional 8TB to store additional 40,000 songs,” said vice president, EMC North and East India, Rajesh Janey.

Studi Das

Page(s)   1  

Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter



ZTE:Leading CDMA Technology


Extraordinary Networks:Freedom of Choice






Collective Intelligence @ Work

Analysts: Guiding Stars or Shepherds?

How's the 'pitch' looking?

What's your Everest?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Magazine Subscription | Sitemap | Contact Us | About Us | Advertising Print | Mediakit Print | jobs@cybermedia

Other CyberMedia web sites
  [Voice&Data]  [CIOL]  [PCQuest]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
  [CIOL Shop]  [DQ Channels]  [DQweek]  [CyberMedia Events]
  [Cybermedia Digital]  [CyberMedia India]   [Cyber Astro
  [Global Services Media ]  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]