Happy New Year to All!
We have various large projects that need backing up - 30-70GB in size. Usually, we backup projects to DVD or CD for archival. However, with larger projects, I was wondering about exterior hard drives - say 80-100GB drives. Then I thought, what about and external USB DAT drive which will take 36/72GB tapes? Wouldn't these be more resilient. Obviously, the native capacity is only 36GB, and as most audio/image/video data is already compressed, we wouldn't get anything like the 72GB-per-tape, but spanning two tapes would be easier than multiple DVDs, and tapes are surely more resilient than external hard disks - i.e. you could drop them without worrying!
Any thoughts on this? Are tapes the way to go these days?
From a cost point of view they seem OK - an exterior 36/72GB Dat drive would be about £300, and the tapes are about £10 each. Compared to buying new hard disks (two sets) for every archived project (about £100 each for a 100GB), it seems pretty good.
We have various large projects that need backing up - 30-70GB in size. Usually, we backup projects to DVD or CD for archival. However, with larger projects, I was wondering about exterior hard drives - say 80-100GB drives. Then I thought, what about and external USB DAT drive which will take 36/72GB tapes? Wouldn't these be more resilient. Obviously, the native capacity is only 36GB, and as most audio/image/video data is already compressed, we wouldn't get anything like the 72GB-per-tape, but spanning two tapes would be easier than multiple DVDs, and tapes are surely more resilient than external hard disks - i.e. you could drop them without worrying!
Any thoughts on this? Are tapes the way to go these days?
From a cost point of view they seem OK - an exterior 36/72GB Dat drive would be about £300, and the tapes are about £10 each. Compared to buying new hard disks (two sets) for every archived project (about £100 each for a 100GB), it seems pretty good.
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