I used to have a little 5 slot HP DAT juke on my desk at work (SureStore I believe is the name). Still got a bunch of 2 GB DATs floating about the home office though I haven's used my SCSI DAT drive in years. What's the max capacity on 8mm now? I doubt they can handle today's capacities unless you're talking about a silo. HDDs still appear to be the only sensible storage solution at home these days.
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Looks like quite a bit. Here's an HP tape backup drive that holds 400 GB per tape:
Jammrock“Inside every sane person there’s a madman struggling to get outâ€
–The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett
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Actually, that IBM drive is a 1/2" drive.
Here's where 8mm is right now:AIT-3, in a 3.5-inch form-factor, provides up to 100GB of native capacity (260GB with compression) and a 12MB/sec sustained native transfer rate (31MB/sec with compression)Last edited by Wombat; 1 August 2004, 20:02.Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
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Originally posted by Wombat
You quoted "AIT-3, in a 3.5-inch form-factor, provides up to 100GB of native capacity (260GB with compression) and a 12MB/sec sustained native transfer rate (31MB/sec with compression)"
... 8mm tapes run about $50, less in bulk.<TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>
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You're right, they might not be the right choice for you. But your knowledge of the technology needs quite a bit of refreshing.
The drives I've been working with have hardly needed any maintenance at all in our labs, and we abuse them worse than almost anybody. Except in a few extreme cases (like swinging them around the labs) the drives we use haven't needed anything more than a cleaning tape.
And the tapes themselves are quite impressive. Far more durable than any hard drive.
And DVD-R? Good luck. About 90% of those should survive 5 years if you're lucky.Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
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Originally posted by Wombat
... But your knowledge of the technology needs quite a bit of refreshing. ...
... And DVD-R? Good luck. About 90% of those should survive 5 years if you're lucky.Last edited by xortam; 2 August 2004, 14:15.<TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>
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Picked up another sale HDD this morning. 120 GB 7200 RPM 8 MB cache ... $47 after rebate or about $0.40/GB.<TABLE BGCOLOR=Red><TR><TD><Font-weight="+1"><font COLOR=Black>The world just changed, Sep. 11, 2001</font></Font-weight></TR></TD></TABLE>
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