On Mon, Mar 7, 2016 at 1:13 PM, Dave McGuire via vcf-midatlantic < vcf-midatlantic@lists.vintagecomputerfederation.org> wrote:
On 03/07/2016 11:44 AM, Evan Koblentz via vcf-midatlantic wrote:
All those tape fraudsters...
40TB in tape probably means *5TB uncompressed
:-)
(Yes, I know their false marketing was normally assuming 2:1 compression)
Indeed. Spec is 20.6TB uncompressed using 36GB DLT 7000 cartridges.
Still, the most storage local in any current phone is 128GB with another 128GB possible through a microSD card. Combined that is "only" 1/4th of a TB.
Looks like we'll definitely have to reference cloud storage on the sign. I am fine with that because the prevalence of LTE + WiFi make many TBs of storage * essentially * local/personal to your phone.
That's many TBs of *someone else's* storage. Despite corporations' heavy attempts to train the general uneducated public that there's no difference, you and I know that the distinction is critical.
One thing I had thought to do with that tape juke is to use a sheet metal nibbler to cut a "window" in the main door, put some lucite/plexi in there with a rubber surround to make it look good, then write some code to move the tape picker around inserting/rearranging tapes. I hate modifying hardware, and normally I'd never consider such a thing, but as you observed, the thing just isn't old enough to be "vintage" to anyone but the most clueless PC person, and they're not terribly rare either. But most people are never in an environment where such things are in use, so it'd be a new experience to see one batting its positioner around.
-Dave
-- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA
Simmilar to the StorageTek tape juke is the Sony BetaCart and its variations, but insted of DLT tapes it contained some form of videotape cassette either BetaCam 1/2" variants or D-2 3/4" tapes. The system was introduced in 1985 and allowwd a TV station to air many different videotapes automatically, the minimum system consisted of 1(expandable to 4) BetaCam VCR modified to take tapes in from the side, a cart robot that could hold 30 tapes, an AV matrix switcher and a custom control computer with bar code printing and reading cability. -- Matt Patoray Owner, MSP Productions KD8AMG Amateur Radio Call Sign