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(rād) Short for Redundant Array
of Independent (or Inexpensive) Disks,
a category of disk drives that employ
two or more drives in combination for
fault tolerance and performance. RAID disk drives are used frequently on
servers but aren't generally necessary for
personal computers. RAID allows
you to store the same data redundantly (in multiple paces) in a balanced ay to
improve overall performance.
There are number of different RAID levels:
See "Storage
Strategies Made Simple" in the "Did
You Know...?" section of Webopedia.
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RAID Revs for the Future Now RAID itself is becoming virtualized, abstracting the data from a disk concept into a much broader object-based concept. One concept that is gaining momentum is the idea of linking RAID nodes together into a larger storage mechanism.
SmallBusinessComputing.com: Has Your Business Been RAID-ed? RAID, or Redundant Array of Independent (or Inexpensive) Disks, used to be the province of geeks and high-end IT departments. These days, however, it is finding a growing audience among small businesses as a means of increasing the reliability of critical systems, keeping a database online regardless of failures, preventing data loss, and accelerating information access.
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