On 18/10/16 16:32, Thomas Dzubin wrote:
But, I also have two big rubbermade containers (about half a cubic
meter) filled with TK50 and TK70 tapes which I have never used.
Some are blank, some are the boot & install media for VMS 5.5, some are
software installations, etc. etc.
In the past 25 years that I have had them, I have not once ever used
my TK50 or TK70 drives...I've always either booted off the attached
disks or netbooted.
I don't use TK50 tapes very often, but when I do, it's either to boot a
VAX from cold
(and install VMS) or to make a standalone backup.
As for the value of the tapes, I've no idea about monetary value, but -
in my view - they
are part of the culture associated with the machines. I probably
wouldn't use TK50 to
install software as I already have it on CD and can set up an infoserver
on the home
network if needed, but back in the day there were plenty of machines
which had no easy
way to talk to a CD-ROM. When I worked in DEC that wasn't an issue,
again because
there were infoservers around. When I was a customer, tapes were the
only viable option for
a few of the machines (and for one it had to be 9-track tapes).
I expect that you'll get a few offers to take the carts off your hands.
Antonio
--
Antonio Carlini
arcarlini at
iee.org