Supposedly IPI was a thing for high end servers. SOOOO impressive that
there is limited mention of it?
Some things never really take off. ATA was "good enough" for even
low-end servers, most servers used SCSI until it ran out of gas, today low-end servers use SATA, mid-end servers usually use NVMe or SAS,
high-end servers use some flavor of fiber (FICON and FCP are popular
but there's got to be at least a dozen other proprietary schemes).
And within a SAN you have "speed layers" of storage, with the fastest
flash as the top tier, then another one or two tiers of slower flash,
then various tiers of spinning rust, and finally tape (yes, LTO is
still a thing).
For the home and small businesses, a lot of people use a NAS, and those
come in a wide variety of flavors. And then there's cloud storage...
http://ps-2.kev009.com/ohland/SCSI/Intelligent_Peripheral_Interface.html
Supposedly IPI was a thing for high end servers. SOOOO impressive that
there is limited mention of it?
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