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Procom Technology, Inc., was an American computer storage products manufacturer based in Orange County, California, and active from 1987 to 2005.The company initially produced a wide range of standalone magnetic and optical data storage products for the IBM PC and compatibles and the Macintosh before honing in on platform-agnostic network-attached storage (NAS) products.
Datastorm Technologies, Inc., was a computer software company that existed from 1986 until 1996.Bruce Barkelew and Thomas Smith founded the company to develop and publish ProComm, a general-purpose communications program for personal computers. [1]
Procom, ProCom or PROCOM may refer to: Processes of Compounds (PROCOM), a process simulation software package; see Crosslight Software § PROCOM; ProCom, the Promotion Commission of the World Association for Waterborne Transport Infrastructure; Procom Technology, a company acquired by Sun Microsystems in 2005
The Sun Fire X4500 data server (code named Thumper) integrates server and storage technologies.It was announced in July, 2006 [1] and is part of the Sun Fire server line from Sun Microsystems.
The SPARCstation IPX can hold one internal 50-pin IDC SCSI drive and a floppy drive. It also supports external SCSI devices. There is no IDE/ATAPI support. Modern 80-pin SCA drives can work with an adapter, but do not fit inside the case due to the size of the adapter.
A Sun UltraSPARC II microprocessor (1997). SPARC (Scalable Processor ARChitecture) is a reduced instruction set computer (RISC) instruction set architecture originally developed by Sun Microsystems.
Cobalt RaQ 2, running Debian GNU/Linux, as indicated by the front display. The Cobalt RaQ is a 1U rackmount server product line developed by Cobalt Networks, Inc. (later purchased by Sun Microsystems) featuring a modified Red Hat Linux operating system and a proprietary GUI for server management.
ZFS (previously Zettabyte File System) is a file system with volume management capabilities. It began as part of the Sun Microsystems Solaris operating system in 2001. Large parts of Solaris, including ZFS, were published under an open source license as OpenSolaris for around 5 years from 2005 before being placed under a closed source license when Oracle Corporation acquired Sun in 2009–2010.
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