I'd probably start with the US Commerce Department. In their industrial
report summaries, the product code is "36950 11"
e.g.:
https://tinyurl.com/y8ks3mdd for 1987-88
I don't know if the information exists on a worldwide basis.
--Chuck
On 08/06/2018 10:24 AM, Shoppa, Tim via cctalk wrote:
Bitsavers has preserved a couple of key marketing
studies that help me understand the wide world of disk storage in the 70's and
80's. For example
http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/competitiveAnalysis/Engineering_Strategy_R…
has numbers both for DEC and world disk market. DEC sales were a substantial chunk of the
world market of disk sales and the document seems to understand the up and coming world of
small disks while also having good numbers on the mainframe disk world.
I wonder if we have any documentation (probably internal numbers but maybe also including
guessing at competition) of, say, reels of half inch magtape sales sold in the past.
Chances are this would be a 3M or competitor's document since the bulk of magtape
media sales were not normally done through DEC or IBM etc.
For example I might guess that by the 1980's there were 5 reels of 2400foot half inch
magtape for every person in America and tapes were reused up to 10 years. That would imply
that 100 million reels of tape were sold a year. But that's just a guess and maybe
I'm off by an order of magnitude one way or the other.
So if you know of any documents to help me get a comprehension of the scale of computer
tape manufacturing in the 1970's and 1980's, please let me know! It might be a 3M
press release bragging about opening a new plant and what it's capable of, for
example.
Tim N3QE
--
--Chuck
Sent from my digital computer