We just procured a new Overland LTO-6 library this year at work so I can
tell you from direct experience that tape is not dead! Although
direct-to-disk and to-tape backup cost has more or less converged from a
price standpoint, there are still some nice aspects of tape ... you get
practically infinite storage in a finite number of rack units ... you don't
need to keep whole racks of disks on the data center floor, powered up;
they're more conducive to off-site archival and so on.
I've tried to use tape at home mostly as a backup media at least a few
times ... with DAT, with QIC ... with 8 mm ... and of course I've played
with the older DEC cartridge tapes i.e. TK50/TK70 ... never had much luck
with them ... I think the transports are pretty "used up" by the time they
get to me ... I still do have a few TK50 drives, a DAT and a QIC ... I
don't have much media left ... a few TK50 cartridges and a box of QIC tapes
where the rollers have turned to goop ...
It would be a hoot to get a 9-track in here someday to play with but I
wouldn't want to spend a whole lot of dough on it ...
So, I think tape has bright prospects both in production IT as well as in
the hobbyist environment yet :O
Best,
Sean
On Mon, Sep 14, 2015 at 6:38 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at update.uu.se> wrote:
On 2015-09-14 20:43, Murray McCullough wrote:
I came across a fascinating article by Evan
Koblentz in TechRepublic
Daily Digest today entitled: ?Tape isn't dying -- it's getting
healthier and smarter?. Does this mean my ADAM tape drive system has a
future after all? Naw! But one can wish. Are there tape systems in the
PDP family, et. al., still running?
Happy computing.
Murray :)
Can't answer in general, but my PDP-11/93 have a DDS-3, an Exabyte and a
TK50 running.
Update have a couple of PDP-11/70 systems, and have tape drives on them,
although our TU81 currently seems dead.
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol