Synology Joins OpenCAPI to Advance Enterprise Storage Performance
Synology joins the OpenCAPI Consortium to help improve high-performance storage architecture
Synology joined the OpenCAPI Consortium in 2017, which showed that it was still committed to designing servers that focus on data. The announcement was made a few years ago, but its strategic importance is still relevant in 2025–2026 as businesses demand higher throughput, lower latency, and better integration between storage and compute layers.
System architecture efficiency is very important as companies work with bigger datasets, virtualization workloads, AI processing, and hybrid cloud replication. When Synology joined the OpenCAPI Consortium, it showed that it wanted to keep up with new high-performance interconnect standards that aim to get rid of old system bottlenecks.
What OpenCAPI Is and Why It Matters
Major tech companies like AMD, Google, IBM, Mellanox Technologies, and Micron started the OpenCAPI Consortium. The goal of the initiative is to create an open, coherent, high-performance bus interface that will make computing closer to data and get rid of inefficiencies in traditional architectures.
OpenCAPI makes it easier for processors, accelerators, memory subsystems, and storage devices to talk to each other. Latency and bandwidth limits can cause problems in high-performance environments when using traditional PCIe-based systems. OpenCAPI was made to get around these problems by making communication routes faster and more efficient.
Data-Centric Architecture and Its Importance to Businesses
In 2025–2026, enterprise IT infrastructure will be more focused on workloads that use a lot of data:
- Clusters of virtual machines
- Backup repositories on a large scale
- Syncing between hybrid clouds
- AI and data analysis
Workflows for high-resolution media
Storage systems need to reduce the time it takes for data to move between the compute and data layers in order to support these use cases. Data-centric architectures try to cut down on moving data that isn’t needed and speed up the overall throughput.
Synology’s involvement in OpenCAPI shows that they are more interested in designing storage systems that are focused on performance than just adding more space. This direction helps businesses that are using scalable NAS systems by:
- Better efficiency in I/O
- Fewer bottlenecks in the system
- Better connection to high-speed networks
- Long-term compatibility with changing hardware standards
The Bigger Effect on Storage Ecosystems
Open standards are important for stopping vendor lock-in and letting different hardware ecosystems work together. Synology showed that it was committed to following industry standards instead of relying on its own architectures by working with OpenCAPI.
This method gives enterprise buyers peace of mind that their investments in storage infrastructure will still work with future improvements in computing and networking.
Standards-based development lowers long-term risk and makes lifecycle planning easier in distributed enterprise environments where performance consistency and scalability are important.
Innovating performance beyond just adding more capacity
Adding more drives is no longer the only way to grow enterprise storage. It needs smart design that brings together:
- Networking at high speeds
- Using memory efficiently
- Storage pools that can grow
- More advanced ways to cache
- Connecting to a hybrid cloud
Being part of forward-looking technology standards helps Synology reach these goals by making it easier for the company to adapt to new computing and accelerator technologies.
Strategic Consequences for IT Planning in 2025–2026
When businesses update their infrastructure for AI workloads, real-time analytics, and distributed collaboration, the efficiency of the hardware architecture has a direct effect on:
- Length of the backup window
- How well a virtual machine works
- Speed of replication across multiple sites
- Processing large datasets
Standards like OpenCAPI help make these improvements possible by being part of a larger ecosystem.
OpenCAPI is a hardware-level interface, but it has an effect on storage systems that makes it harder for NAS platforms to work with next-generation compute environments.
About the Technology of Epis
Epis Technology helps businesses build IT infrastructure that can grow and is based on Synology storage platforms. Epis Technology offers consulting for Synology, designing large storage systems, backing up Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace, fully managing PC backups, and making plans for business continuity. Epis Technology makes sure that organizations are ready for future workload demands by aligning their storage architecture with changing performance standards and hybrid cloud strategies. This keeps their data safe and resilient.