Storage Networking Industry Association

Trade association formed to develop standards for storage area networks From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Storage Networking Industry Association

The Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) is an American trade association, incorporated in December 1997. It is a registered 501(c)(6) non-profit organization. SNIA has more than 185 unique members, 2,000 active contributing members, and over 50,000 IT end users and storage professionals.

Quick Facts Abbreviation, Formation ...
Storage Networking Industry Association
AbbreviationSNIA
FormationDecember 22, 1997; 27 years ago (1997-12-22)
TypeNonprofit
Headquarters5201 Great America Parkway, Suite 320
Location
Chair
J Michel Metz (AMD)
Vice Chair
Richelle Ahlvers (Intel)
Chief Operations Officer
Michael Meleedy
Websitesnia.org
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Description

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Perspective

SNIA's membership community participates in the following storage-related technical working groups:

  • Cloud Storage Technologies
  • Computational Storage
  • Data Management
  • Data Security
  • Dictionary[1]
  • DNA Data Storage[2]
  • Networked Storage
  • Next Generation Data Center
  • Persistent Memory
  • Physical Storage
  • Power Efficiency Measurement
  • Storage Management Initiative – Specification (SMI-S)
  • SNIA Swordfish® - Scalable Storage Management Specification[3][4]

SNIA and its technical council maintain a vendor-neutral dictionary and glossary of storage networking, data, and information management terminology.

The SNIA dictionary won an award for publication excellence in 2009 and 2012 from the Business Communications Report.[citation needed]

SNIA along with Computerworld hosted the popular Storage Networking World (SNW) Conferences from 1999 to 2013, at various venues around the world, and commonly occurred in the Spring and Fall in the USA, and in the Fall in the EU.

SNIA is also the organizer the Storage Developers Conference (SDC).

SNIA absorbed the Small Form Factor Committee.[when?]

SNIA also maintains partnerships with and submits material to other industry standards organizations[5] such as ISO,[6] IEC,[7] DMTF,[8] CXL,[9] INCITS[10] T10, T11, IETF,[11] and IEEE.[12]

References

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