I have several hundred extra tapes, including the 8mm 112, 160, and 170. If
anyone has need of any, feel free to send me your wish list off list.
Thanks, Paul
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 11:46 AM, Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
  On 24 Sep 2010 at 9:43, Dave McGuire wrote:
     It took a few years of running double backups
until we got a truly
 reliable tape system: DLT.  That was 1995, and I am still sold on DLT
 (and its descendants) now.  Super fast, super reliable.  My home
 network's backups are running to a 64-tape juke with four SDLT-220
 drives. 
 We spent about 13 years recommending backup media for a number of
 government agencies, starting in about 1988.  This was in a field
 application--i.e., not a permanent installation, but rather a "snatch
 and grab" sort of affair.
 At the time, we standardized on SCSI, being one of the few external-
 device interfaces with a standard attached to it.
 Intially, the most popular was the Iomega Bernoulli drives (5.25").
 Heavy, yes, but very reliable and reasonably fast.  A few also used
 the DC-600  (6150, 6250) size QIC media.  Not quite as
 straightforward as Bernoulli, but all in all, not bad.
 DDS (4mm tape) was a nightmare.  About all the devices had going for
 them was cost (for read-after-write medium, it was pretty good) and
 capacity.  I've not found long-term (>10 years) stability to be very
 good.
 8mm (Exabyte) tape was most popular with the larger agencies and
 performed quite well.  The biggest problem is that it was Exabyte-
 proprietary and so the drives were single-sourced.
 After that, the next step was high-capacity MO (e.g. PMC Apex 4GB).
 The medium wasn't bad, but the drives weren't made for field use and
 failed frequently.  PMC got to be overwhelmed with their swap-repair
 service and eventually declared bankruptcy.
 DLT was briefly popular (reliability was great), media and drive cost
 was high, but using commodity hard drives eventually won out.
 For me, there are always surprises.  I recently came across a cache
 of backup tapes I made in 1988 using an Irwin (EZTape?) DC-1000
 minicart drive. Every single one of the dozen backups was readable.
 Sometimes, you just never can tell.
 But you can keep your Datasonix Pereos drives.  One of the largest
 publicity blitzes for a non-working product that I've ever seen.
 --Chuck