When Oracle launched OCI Zettascale10, they named a product. When Japan committed $761 million to build FugakuNEXT, they named a government program. Nobody named the category.
Zettarray names the category. Not a specific cluster, not a specific country's initiative — the concept itself: arrays that operate at zettascale. This is the domain a company would want if they are building the platform layer above individual clusters, or the software that orchestrates distributed zettascale compute, or the storage architecture that handles zettabyte-scale data, or the scientific consortium that links global instrument arrays into a single coordinated system.
Oracle owns "Zettascale10" as a product name. Nobody owns the generic category brand. Zettarray.com is that brand — available now, before the category fully crystallizes.
The history of infrastructure naming shows a consistent pattern: the platform layer gets named after the scale it operates at — Megabyte era gave us Mega brands, Gigabyte era gave us Giga brands, Terabyte and Petabyte eras produced their own vocabulary. Zetta is the next tier. Array is the architecture. Zettarray is what comes next.