Mountain View, Calif. – May 27, 2021 — Pure Storage® (NYSE: PSTG), the IT pioneer that delivers storage as-a-service in a multi-cloud world, today announced that TrustRadius has recognized both FlashArray™ and FlashBlade® as 2021 Top Rated Award winners for the second year in a row. With a trScore of 9.4 out of 10 and over 342 verified reviews, FlashArray won in the Enterprise Flash Array Storage category. With a trSCore of 9.1 out of 10 and over 44 verified reviews, FlashBlade won in the Object Storage category.
Since 2016, the TrustRadius Top Rated Awards have become the industry standard for unbiased recognition of B2B technology products. Based entirely on customer feedback, they have never been influenced by analyst opinion or status as a TrustRadius customer. See a detailed criteria breakdown on the methodology and scoring that TrustRadius uses to determine TopRated winners.
Hear verified, global customers share their experiences and outcomes using FlashArray and FlashBlade:
- “Pure Storage is our Tier 1 storage platform for all servers and services hosted in our datacenter. That's dozens of applications, big and small, in a diverse technical environment with lots of different workloads. The workloads on Pure Storage arrays are 99% virtualized. While it was originally brought in to host our largest workloads that require the highest performing IO, it quickly became the standard for storage performance. Any system engineer will tell you that storage performance issues are a pain, and with shared storage, are not easy to manage. Pure Storage has made storage performance issues a thing of the past and high performing storage is the new normal.” - Chris Saenz, Azusa Pacific University
- “Pure's FlashBlade was brought in-house for the sole reason of testing NFS. Object storage capability was icing on the cake. Although we did not plan to test it, we did receive a request for object storage and decided to utilize the FlashBlade for this request. The engineer who made this request was blown away by the performance after being conditioned by under-whelming object stores in the cloud.” - Anonymous