Why Tape Storage is Making a Sneaky Comeback

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 11 มิ.ย. 2023
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ความคิดเห็น • 1.2K

  • @RockyX123
    @RockyX123 ปีที่แล้ว +4122

    This implies tape went away, which it didn't. Magnetic tape has always been the cheapest form of tertiary backup storage.

    • @BurtonHohman
      @BurtonHohman ปีที่แล้ว +367

      To be fair it did go away for most consumers

    • @williep098
      @williep098 ปีที่แล้ว +245

      Exactly. The aviation industry is a big consumer of tape storage due to its long shelf life. Planes can stay in service for 50+ years and no digital storage method can reliably story data as long and as cheap as magnetic tape.

    • @s1nnocense
      @s1nnocense ปีที่แล้ว +91

      @@BurtonHohman and it will stay there, this is not about consumers tho.

    • @ihcend
      @ihcend ปีที่แล้ว +73

      ​@@BurtonHohman and most consumers will still never interact with tape.

    • @ailivac
      @ailivac ปีที่แล้ว +52

      @@BurtonHohman When was it popular with consumers? The 1970s home computer era (where it was just a simple hack to take advantage of common audio tape equipment) for a few years between when computers weren't something consumers used at all and when floppy disks got cheap enough?

  • @Mooooov0815
    @Mooooov0815 ปีที่แล้ว +2037

    This is anything but a sneaky comeback. Tape storage has been the go to solution for large amounts of cheap archival storage for decades at this point. This tapes are produced by a variety of vendors and you’ll find tons of different archival systems powered by tape storage in essentially every datacenter

    • @Haskellerz
      @Haskellerz ปีที่แล้ว +40

      Tape costs a few hundred, meanwhile tape readers cost like $5,000. lol

    • @Cinkodacs
      @Cinkodacs ปีที่แล้ว +106

      ​@@Haskellerz Which for a company that needs it is basically nothing compared to the capabilities it may bring. Tape storage is usually not for the consumer market.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L ปีที่แล้ว +53

      @@Haskellerz which is why companies used it and not regular people. When you’re spending millions on archive tapes a year the drive cost is nothing.

    • @hogie13765
      @hogie13765 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Yup! I saw a ton of tape backups working with car dealers. You could usually find them piled up on the server rack 😂

    • @someonestolemyname
      @someonestolemyname ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@Cinkodacs Unless you are a compulsive hoarder along the ranks of r/DataHoarder

  • @mejones9145
    @mejones9145 ปีที่แล้ว +2198

    I’ve never had any problems keeping my scotch tape stored

    • @ymodnar
      @ymodnar ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Same with duct tape.

    • @livegolfismygt
      @livegolfismygt ปีที่แล้ว +4

      😑

    • @abbycollins
      @abbycollins ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yeah it’s in my desk drawer and I use it for hanging up prints hai is running outta ideas / silly

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Its finding it when you need it that's the problem...

    • @PraxZimmerman
      @PraxZimmerman ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You scotched your tape?

  • @Krekkertje
    @Krekkertje ปีที่แล้ว +379

    Tape has the added benefit that the data is separate from the reader. If read/write heads fail in a hard drive, you’re looking at a costly clean room operation to transfer the platters into a new enclosure in order to salvage the data. If your tape reader fails, you can just plug in a new tape reader, pop your tape in and you’re good to go.

    • @ataphelicopter5734
      @ataphelicopter5734 ปีที่แล้ว +35

      I’d guess that as tape speeds and data density increase the enclosure will become sealed and will eventually require a cleanroom to transfer, though I love the look of spinning tapes so a clear enclosure would be ideal

    • @Krekkertje
      @Krekkertje ปีที่แล้ว +19

      @@ataphelicopter5734 that would mean the read write head would be inside the tape cassette itself. I don’t see that happening anytime soon.

    • @darrylpioch2055
      @darrylpioch2055 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      In recent times I've been interested in getting a tape drive for the studio computer to archive sessions on tape instead. At the moment I use blu ray discs in addition to the save drive. So if the drive fails eventually I can just drop in a blu ray and copy whatever I was working on to the new drive. Problem is if it fails and I need to open something from a long time ago that's a lot of fking blu ray discs to go through loll. With a several terabyte tape it'll take years to fill it up instead of just a few weeks and that wouldn't be a problem lolll

    • @pointblank2890
      @pointblank2890 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ah so it's sort of like the difference between a dedicated external USB hard drive vs. an internal hard drive stuck into a USB HDD Dock?
      If the controller for the USB hard drive fails, it'd be tricky to get the data off of it. If the USB HDD Dock fails, you can jsut take out the Hard drive and stick in into another dock or into a computer case

    • @mindtropy
      @mindtropy 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yeah, but in general you transfer failed heads with a donated one. Not the platters

  • @dorukhanarslan96
    @dorukhanarslan96 ปีที่แล้ว +701

    "Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway." -Andrew S. Tanenbaum

    • @InventorZahran
      @InventorZahran ปีที่แล้ว +75

      For moving extremely large amounts of data, physical transport is in fact more efficient than sending it over the internets!

    • @dorukhanarslan96
      @dorukhanarslan96 ปีที่แล้ว +49

      @@InventorZahran Yepp, that's why even Amazon AWS provides a tape backup solution called Tape Gateway. I think they can send a truck to your premises grab your tapes.

    • @bengoacher4455
      @bengoacher4455 ปีที่แล้ว +45

      My dad tells the story of how, in the 80s, he was sent from the UK to the USA with rolls of magnetic tape. Back before the internet and undersea cables. Turns out even today there is a critical mass where tapes traveling on a plane is faster than data traveling at light speed.

    • @butsukete1806
      @butsukete1806 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Back in the early warez days, mailing hard drives was fairly common.

    • @Mezgrman
      @Mezgrman ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Amazon has a service for that! Their biggest one is an actual truck, they call it AWS Snowmobile :D

  • @stevec00ps
    @stevec00ps ปีที่แล้ว +798

    The whole "offline" storage thing that tape offers is a huge plus to protect your data against e.g. ransomware

    • @jasondrummond9451
      @jasondrummond9451 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Has given me ideas for using tape (rather than multiple portable hard drives) for offsite storage.

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira ปีที่แล้ว +61

      Anyone can keep their external hard drives offline.

    • @capricciocrypto
      @capricciocrypto ปีที่แล้ว +9

      As long as you‘re not encrypting the data and storing your encryption keys online.

    • @tonysheerness2427
      @tonysheerness2427 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Not if you backed up a virus.

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@tonysheerness2427 Not if you use a system that is not compatible with that virus.

  • @PatrickBaldwin1
    @PatrickBaldwin1 ปีที่แล้ว +404

    Tape never went away. It is good for backup but is not good if you are just wanting one piece of information off of it. They are to slow for anything but archival storage.

    • @butsukete1806
      @butsukete1806 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Backup and archiving are totally different purposes. Backup is to recover when your file server blows up. Archive is for old data that you still need to keep.

    • @RepChris
      @RepChris ปีที่แล้ว +49

      @@butsukete1806 Different yet very similar requirements. It doesnt need fast random access but it does need a lot of capacity. So tape works well for both for similar reasons.

    • @Steamrick
      @Steamrick ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@butsukete1806 If you don't archive your backups (GFS and 3-2-1 principles), you're doing it wrong. Tape is great for backup.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Tapes can also be used for hierarchical storage, where some files that you do intend to use later are still stored only to tape, because storing them anywhere else would be too expensive. Companies like Google sometimes need to store colossal volumes of data that they use only occasionally, and the only cost-effective solution is tape. A networked tape library basically acts like a really big and slow drive for this purpose, which is good enough.

    • @RepChris
      @RepChris ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@EebstertheGreat Yup, for all the same reasons tape is great for archive and backup stuff

  • @arisukak
    @arisukak ปีที่แล้ว +137

    My dad works in IT. A sales rep gave him a refrigerator magnet of a tombstone named Tape Storage that died in 2009. I get a good chuckle out of that.

    • @gdclemo
      @gdclemo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      just don't put the refrigerator magnet on the door of the tape storage cabinet, it might turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  • @ryno101
    @ryno101 ปีที่แล้ว +284

    I’ve been in data storage since about 2000, and people have been predicting the death of tape as a backup media since then. I would always reply, the most bandwidth you will ever see is an Iron Mountain truck full of backup tapes going down the highway.

    • @housellama
      @housellama ปีที่แล้ว +41

      Yeah, for mass storage, it's really hard to beat tape. It may be slow as hell (compared to SSD), but it's absolutely freaking MASSIVE.

    • @supercellex4D
      @supercellex4D ปีที่แล้ว +39

      a train with tapes, though...

    • @TrueHolarctic
      @TrueHolarctic ปีที่แล้ว +9

      ​@liquidgecka if you put tape on the plane bandwidth goes up

    • @the_expidition427
      @the_expidition427 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Off to Iron Mountain this is able to be turned into a song

    • @manitoba-op4jx
      @manitoba-op4jx ปีที่แล้ว

      @@liquidgecka fuck flash memory

  • @Hotshot2k4
    @Hotshot2k4 ปีที่แล้ว +361

    I actually always wanted to know in simple terms how storage devices worked, and was never quite sure until now. Thanks for that side lesson!

    • @SaloCh
      @SaloCh ปีที่แล้ว +29

      What lesson? I got too distracted by the clown

    • @AltonV
      @AltonV ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@SaloCh it was somethin about magnets..... I think 🤔

    • @blueeleephant6o4t
      @blueeleephant6o4t ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@SaloCh Same

    • @AznPrzsn
      @AznPrzsn ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You mean the clown lesson?

    • @Fe22234
      @Fe22234 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The only clowns I need to learn about magnets from is icp.

  • @syliphn8638
    @syliphn8638 ปีที่แล้ว +70

    Here's an even more pressing question: Why is there stock footage of two scientists dancing around and tickling each others' heads?

    • @cubicbanban
      @cubicbanban ปีที่แล้ว +8

      We deserve to know!!!!!!

    • @simonamyot-bourgeois6982
      @simonamyot-bourgeois6982 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      That footage was amazing

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Oh that's an easy one... to be featured on an HAI video.

    • @anaskhan4
      @anaskhan4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Timestamp please

    • @n_core
      @n_core ปีที่แล้ว +4

      ​@@anaskhan4 2:35 here

  • @Sci_X1
    @Sci_X1 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    My hungry ass could never be trusted with tape based storage

    • @piemonster11
      @piemonster11 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      what does this mean

    • @user-zb8tq5pr4x
      @user-zb8tq5pr4x 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@piemonster11 Apparently OP likes to munch on some magnetic tape every once in a while, what is there not to understand

  • @ingobernoble2678
    @ingobernoble2678 ปีที่แล้ว +107

    It's interesting because Star Wars was made in the 70s they store info on "Data tapes". I always thought that was one aspect of that universe that seemed really dated but I guess they were right about that one

    • @MarkTuson
      @MarkTuson ปีที่แล้ว +11

      They also stored data on "tapes" in Star Trek, more than a decade earlier.

  • @vale.antoni
    @vale.antoni ปีที่แล้ว +85

    One very important note, is that the original application of magnetic tape was to store analogue signals, so the re-proliferation can mainly be chalked up to someone realising that tape can also store vast quantities of digital data, and that it is unparalleled, if access speed is not at all a consideration.

    • @DanieleGiorgino
      @DanieleGiorgino ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Technology Connections just did a video on this

    • @vale.antoni
      @vale.antoni ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@DanieleGiorgino The one with the PCM adapter?

    • @DanieleGiorgino
      @DanieleGiorgino ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vale.antoni Yeah!

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Tape never went away in the enterprise space, despite a lot of the nonsense spoken in the video. The industry has been well aware that tape can store vast amounts of data, and LTO is now on its 10th generation in 23 years of development.

    • @johnclement5903
      @johnclement5903 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just for $#!ts & giggles, I picked up an old Quantum SuperDLT tape Carousel unit at a local electronics surplus store. Hooked it up to the big ol' Dell XPS Quad Core 2 tower my uncle left behind for me. Now I can rest assured knowing that All of my family's photos, video, music and software libraries will be archived for my great-great grandchildren!

  • @maximilianmorse9697
    @maximilianmorse9697 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    How did he not mention flash storage even once?

  • @zachx281
    @zachx281 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    The dancing clown was really useful for this one. You all should put it in more videos

    • @anandsharma7430
      @anandsharma7430 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I see this as a startup idea. We need a tool to insert various dancing clowns, generated using Dall-E like AI/ML using famous artists' impressions of popular historical figures, to be our unique dancing clowns on every new youtube video. The age of spinners and progress bars is over, we all need Dancing clowns ! And you should be able to invest in the startup using NFTs made of the original dancing clown animations😁

    • @osakanone
      @osakanone 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I hated it and it made me change tabs. Its too distracting.

    • @Clem-gk4ye
      @Clem-gk4ye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@osakanoneI feel like that’s a you problem

  • @EebstertheGreat
    @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +70

    I was just looking into robotic tape libraries recently. They are by far the largest data storage devices ever conceived of, supposedly reaching 2 exabytes (2 × 10¹⁸ bytes), enough to store over a quadrillion "standard pages" of uncompressed text, which is far more text than has ever been physically produced by humans. And it fits in a room. And it's automated.
    By the way, you missed an important detail about hard drives. Hard drives today don't just have a single platter like they used to. For instance, the WD 22 TB drive has ten platters of 2.2 TB each. So in a sense it's almost like buying ten drives, as most of the hardware can't be shared between platters. That's part of what contributes to its high cost (MSRP $600). The equivalent change for tape drives is making the tape thinner so more can be crammed in a single cassette. But just adding more length of tape to a cassette is far cheaper than adding additional platters to a hard drive.

    • @User31129
      @User31129 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So as long as you're willing to sacrifice space, you could technically produce and sell say a 36 TB drive with 18 2 TB platters. It would be awfully tall by today's standards, but not as tall as say a 2000 era PC was.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@User31129 You could, but if it doesn't fit into a 3.5" drive, no one will buy it.

    • @imzjustplayin
      @imzjustplayin 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@User31129 Or they could go back to 5.25" HDDs.

    • @Angel2kinds
      @Angel2kinds 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I handle purchases for a decently sized hosting company, and we get our 20TB SATA HDDs for 200€ a pop. that's 220$ish. (and that's price for individual drive, without any bulk sale)
      it will take a while before we switch to a larger size model (standardized infra), so I don't really have a quote for 22TB model.
      You sure the MSRP is accurate?

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Angel2kinds It's accurate. Most stores are selling them for 30-50% off the list price.

  • @mdbizzarri
    @mdbizzarri ปีที่แล้ว +65

    As a DBA and former Tape Library supervisor, this is fascinating. I've now seen IT come full circle, from punch cards to tape, HDD, SCSI, floppy, zip, SDD, cloud, and now back to physical tape. One reel we used to have had 750 MB of data on 5 lbs of tape.

    • @TheRealHarrypm
      @TheRealHarrypm ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Its more heading to Sony Optical Archive for cold stores now tbh less cost of ownership and future proofing issues non magnetic is a lot more safe and at 500GB a disc and 5.5TB a cartrage at 200USD its cost effective too.

    • @Nalehw
      @Nalehw ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Looking forward to punch cards coming back. Any day now...

    • @YouShookItThreeTimes
      @YouShookItThreeTimes ปีที่แล้ว +3

      ​@@TheRealHarrypm
      750 MB uses 5 pounds of tape storage is a really fascinating factoid you have brought up in my opinion.
      I recently transferred 30 GB of audio and video to a device and it made me think about how much tape that would require based on this and it really gave me a better understanding that I would need about 200 pounds of tape if this was going to be stored in this way.

    • @PascalGienger
      @PascalGienger ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I started my "career" with reel-to-reel 9 track tape - and it was really a factor of the record length how much data went into that tape because after each record it put a quite huge portion of unused tape - so the machine can find record number X by fast winding the tape and reading those record separators. It was even direct access - if you used a record as a block you could format it as a file system - this created that constant fast back-and-forth spinning to read arbitrarily chosen blocks.
      Those machines had a tape loop in nearly vacuum to be able to rapidly reverse fast winding movement without tearing the tape. That's why a glass window closed the area after mounting a tape and a pump pumped air out of it.

    • @Berkeloid0
      @Berkeloid0 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@NRGY Paper's great but for true longevity you should really be looking at stone tablets

  • @Xelopheris
    @Xelopheris ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Magnetic tape has been around this whole time. It's been the most common form of storage for infrequently accessed data, which typically means backups. It will never become a standard level storage because access time can be huge, but thanks to automated tape libraries being able to insert the right tape and read to the right thing, you can store data that you might need later much cheaper than storing it in a format where it stays available.
    If you look at a cloud service, something like Amazon S3 has their standard tier on actual drives (HDDs or SSDs), but their Glacier format is infrequent access, which is on tapes. Getting those files off the tapes starts with a request to make them live, which starts a process where AWS copies the data off those tapes onto something for you to get it later. It's a pretty common practice.

  • @davidrajchman7162
    @davidrajchman7162 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    You forgot to mention the super cool way tape archives work. The have just few readers and many "offline" shelf and there is a super fast robot that swaps the right tapes into the reader
    It's amazing to watch

    • @stupidlogon888
      @stupidlogon888 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Even more fun when the robots get out of whack and start smashing the tapes into each other or launch them through the storage cells into the heavy metal frame.

  • @StopMotionPotato33
    @StopMotionPotato33 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Feel like I should point out that some interesting physics stuff (plasmonic near field transducers) have also made hard drives much more dense over the last couple years, but aren't quite commercialized yet. Seagate just started selling 30 TB drives, and the plan is to release 60+ TB drives in 2026. Doesn't even touch the 9 PB theoretical capacity of tape, but the upper limit hasn't *quite* been reached.

  • @OriginalGriff
    @OriginalGriff ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Hard drive sales also began to tank a few years ago because of the rise of SSDs which aren't susceptible to the superparamagnetic limit because they use transistors instead of a magnetic media. The largest SSD currently available has a capacity of 100 terabyte, and they are significantly faster than traditional HDDs. (They have other problems, but ... that's another video for you! :D ) Tapes are an effecitive solution, but only really for offline storage - online data needs much faster access than tape can provide.
    Good video though!

  • @Appletank8
    @Appletank8 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    Very convenient that Technology Connections talked about how tape was the best way to store massive amounts of audio tracks before HDDs

    • @TestSpaceMonkey
      @TestSpaceMonkey ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Was just going to post the same, I think he said 3-5GB on a VHS with mid 70's consumer technology depending on error correction. Typical consumers (other than those who needed to record multiple hours of digital audio) just didn't have the need for that much storage. I think a typical entry-level home computer from the era was still being programmed one byte at a time with switches on the front panel... th-cam.com/video/xSnrQBfBCzY/w-d-xo.html

    • @darrylpioch2055
      @darrylpioch2055 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You mean tape they would record on in a studio?
      That's a lot different than the type of tape they're talking about here (usually). The big 2-inch studio reels are all 24-track analog. the 1-inch reels are all 16-track analog. And most of the giant studio tape decks are analog. BUT there are some big reel to reel decks that are 48-track digital and record on a thinner special type of tape. Usually 1/4 inch. Some were 24-bit 48K. Those machines dreadfully SUCKED though. They were deathly sensitive to mechanical specs falling slightly out needing constant service and cost a quarter million new. After that DTRS became the standard for a long time which was a rack of digital 8-track machines that each recorded 8 tracks + a timecode track on an Hi8 tape and you could sync up to 16 of them together (and thus have ur session spread across 16 different tapes that all need to play at the same time lolll). That was a lot better as far as recording digitally in the 90s and early 2000s. Still today though a big percentage of popular music is recorded on 24-track for the character it adds

  • @michaelsanchez1361
    @michaelsanchez1361 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Tape was an excellent backup storage. Once a tape was dropped, the data still intact

  • @TheMajorStranger
    @TheMajorStranger ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Data storage is becoming a combined arms system. From tape to HDD to SDD to NVMe. They all have their use and will work together to achieve maximum storage and optimize access and cost.

    • @Kevin-bm1gf
      @Kevin-bm1gf ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You are correct in that these storage devices work in tandem depending on how "hot" the data is. The multi-tiered system is the main system used in the corporate world. "tape to HDD to SDD to NVMe" NVMe is actually a transport, not a storage device or technology. The comparison of NVMe is to SAS, Fibre Channel, parallel SCSI, SATA, iSCSI, etc.

    • @TheMajorStranger
      @TheMajorStranger ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Kevin-bm1gf I was mostly making the distinction between SATA SSD limited to 600 Mbps and PCIe Gen 4 NVMe SSD in form of M.2 expansion card which can achieve 7500 Mbps. Both are colloquially refered to Solid State Drive (because they are) but use different port. So don't be pedantic it was pretty clear what I was referring to this.

  • @PascalxSome
    @PascalxSome ปีที่แล้ว +24

    We used tape for offsite backups since ... 20 years now... It's for cold storage basically

    • @PascalxSome
      @PascalxSome ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@busimagen Wasn't in the business back then, but yeah, it never was gone

  • @timmurray2945
    @timmurray2945 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Tape storage is still a quite very common backup storage medium in I.T. Have worked in a few places where data backups would get backed up onto tape as a tertiary method of keeping the data, and the database could be restored from tape when/if needed. It's not uncommon at all for many companies to use this method to make sure that they always have a copy of the data somewhere incase it's ever needed.

    • @h.mandelene3279
      @h.mandelene3279 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      True. You will rarely see a data restore request(99% of companies). The flexibility of taking TBs of data off site, version controls, legal archivals, you name it - its size in tape media and not risk having hardware on each cartridge that could potentially go bad, is the way to go.

  • @seporokey
    @seporokey ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Platter hard drives are continuing to evolve past the ~22 TB limit as well. Our good ole disk drives are starting to use a technology called "Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording" (HAMR). The first consumer HAMR drives are set to release either end of this year or early next year and will be around 30 TB, with up to 50+ TB planned for the future.
    Edit: A word :)

    • @mousermind
      @mousermind ปีที่แล้ว +2

      *past the

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Is that using locally applied heat to the curie point to magnetise a smaller area?

  • @bredsheeran2897
    @bredsheeran2897 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    That clown in the bottom of the screen 💀 1:39

  • @SoulSukkur
    @SoulSukkur ปีที่แล้ว +4

    HAI, 5:17 - "You're spending too much money on coffee!"
    Me, who is spending zero money on coffee - "You have my attention."

  • @jackkraken3888
    @jackkraken3888 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Magnetic tape has always been there but it was mostly for enterprise for backups. It's not great for instant retrieval but it can store a lot.

  • @r4sk3t96
    @r4sk3t96 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    thanks for the clown editors, it was a really hard watch

    • @unlink1649
      @unlink1649 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The editors of wendover are so fucking lazy they just add random pieces of stock footage and yeet it. It’s so painful how the production quality tanked

  • @SeptemberMeadows
    @SeptemberMeadows ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Tape drives will evolve into Linear Pile systems, probably by the end of the decade with crazy multiple read/write heads. First version will literally be stacked (Pile) but circular versions will be on the scene soon after. The best ones will be kept in orbit with some serious shielding. What's old is new again but better 😉

  • @_GhostMiner
    @_GhostMiner ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Also another advantage of tape storage is that the device holding the tape has no moving parts (at least the normal/traditional tape cassettes and stuff) which means there's nothing to break inside the cassette that holds the data unlike on hard drives where if the mechanism that read and writes the data fails, you have to spend A LOT of money on getting the data recovered by some specialist.
    Also hard drives are very sensitive to physical damage, and pretty any movement while running.

  • @XLR8bg
    @XLR8bg ปีที่แล้ว +3

    0:19: Clarification - it is the oldest "non-volatile" storage. If we are talking about computer data storage as a whole, then Wiliams Tube did come a lot earlier, it was basically the very first RAM (volatile storage).

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L ปีที่แล้ว +4

      And before then we had mercury delay lines! Volatile, but not randomly accessible. Worst of both worlds!
      Plus of course the first NVRAM is actually core memory.

    • @Kevin-bm1gf
      @Kevin-bm1gf ปีที่แล้ว +1

      How are punch cards not non-volatile storage? ;-)

  • @dhillaz
    @dhillaz ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The editor and animator nailed this video - very fluid and punchy. 👌

    • @davetech1269
      @davetech1269 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Especially that clown, man

  • @fredashay
    @fredashay ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I'd love to have some kind of tape backup, but all tape systems are mad expensive!
    Some startup should have a cheap tape backup using audio cassettes and USB.

  • @connecticutaggie
    @connecticutaggie ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Tape does have two big limitations: 1) Unlike Hard Drives, tapes are a contact media so they wear and the process can also weaken/corrupt the stored information 2) Tape is rolled up so one layer of information (magnets) has another layer of information (magnets) above it and below it which can also weaken/corrupt the stored information over time (called plate-through).

    • @Brando56894
      @Brando56894 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yep, tape has a definite shelf life and needs to be protected from magnetic fields. My dad had a bunch of VHS-C tapes from the early 90s that he recorded of me, my brother, and our friends. They sat in a cabinet for about 20-25 years until I finally decided to digitize them last Christmas. Most of the tapes where digitally degraded. Some were an absolute loss, no audio, picture extremely fuzzy and tracking issues, etc... Some were ok the picture looked fine but the audio was messed up at points. I think part of the problem is that these were stored next to a 10 inch subwoofer that wasn't working the majority of that time, but the speaker magnet still produced a magnetic field.

    • @MarkTuson
      @MarkTuson ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Limitation 1 isn't relevant because it's not subjected to constant read-write cycles. The tape is recorded and then shoved in a vault out of sight until it's needed again.
      Limitation 2 (which is called *print-through*, not plate-through) is also not an issue if the recording medium has a high enough magnetic coercivity and the saturation isn't too high - both things being taken into account during the design of the recorders and the tapes because of the extreme density of the recording. Also, with modern digital tape using either helical or transverse scanning, any print-through that does occur is unlikely to overlap significantly enough to interfere with the actual signal.

    • @connecticutaggie
      @connecticutaggie ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MarkTuson Are these systems used primarily for archive and backup?

    • @nopenope4402
      @nopenope4402 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Companies use tape for long term archive due to legal requirements. Most of the time they don't actually want the data restored, so it doesn't matter if the information gets corrupted..

  • @king_br0k
    @king_br0k ปีที่แล้ว +2

    3:26 that is the most disturbing clip of stock footage I have ever seen

  • @SylvesterAshcroft88
    @SylvesterAshcroft88 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    It would actually be pretty useful if you could load the tape into a tower like a cassette, which would load into memory similar to an ssd, or traditional hdd, so that could be pretty convenient if it was fast enough, as you could in theory just swap it out similar to how we used to use floppy disks.

    • @butsukete1806
      @butsukete1806 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      It's called hierarchical storage management.

    • @charredUtensil
      @charredUtensil ปีที่แล้ว +22

      There are already robots that can pick specific tapes off a massive bookshelf and load them into a reader. Banks have been using this to store check images for decades. I believe one system from the 90s boasted it could load any individual check image within about 10 seconds.
      Remember, magnetic tape is really for archives - stuff you need to write continuously and then keep indefinitely, but very rarely do you ever have to go back and pull something off the shelf.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +8

      The way a robotic tape library works, you request a file, a robotic arm grabs the appropriate cassette and loads the entire thing into memory, and then you can access it and do whatever you want with it.

    • @andybrice2711
      @andybrice2711 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think that's pretty much how it already works. You just rarely see those machines outside a data archive facility.

  • @BoogsterSU2
    @BoogsterSU2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    brb gonna buy a 9000TB tape storage drive to replace my old HDD on my laptop

  • @uvbe
    @uvbe ปีที่แล้ว +5

    2:35 where do you even find this stock footage lmao

  • @TheRealHarrypm
    @TheRealHarrypm ปีที่แล้ว +2

    LTO/SAIT2 tape has been standard for the last 2 decades, now optical archival like M-Disc on the consumer side and Sony Optical Archive is replacing it due to long term cost of duplication and risk of loss in a flooding or thermal event being smaller and endurance goes from 30 years to 100+ years.

  • @thederiver
    @thederiver ปีที่แล้ว +1

    "but it's interesting because the different box is old" really got me 😂

  • @jonas1015119
    @jonas1015119 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    there is a subplot to this which involves the weird standards of LTO tape storage systems and the fact they have extremely limited backwards compatibility. So while you can theoretically store them for a long time, they have a huge planned obsolescence problem and after 10+ years most facilities wont have the hardware necessary to read older tapes anymore, and you need to copy the entire archive over to the newer standard.

  • @elliot9634
    @elliot9634 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    the zoomer retention clown has me losing it

    • @davetech1269
      @davetech1269 ปีที่แล้ว

      As an ADD man I find it difficult choosing such try to focus on

  • @tsbrownie
    @tsbrownie ปีที่แล้ว +1

    To store more data on tape, you need either longer tape (bigger reels/lower storage density in the machine) or thinner tape (weaker/print thru/self erasure) or smaller "bits" (higher error rates). And that needs to work in a "dirty" environment. It has a 10 year "shelf life" (no use), or x number of passes (depending on tape and drive). Tape has always had its place as an offline/offsite backup. It **should** be safe from ransomware, fire/disaster, etc. BUT it becomes susceptible to theft and loss (ibm lost customer data when tapes fell out of the back of a truck).

  • @RingoBuns
    @RingoBuns ปีที่แล้ว

    I love the editing on this one. Super fun.

  • @CosmoBurst
    @CosmoBurst ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Clown was pretty entertaining ngl

  • @gvfc
    @gvfc ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Except tape storage never really went away.

  • @cconnors
    @cconnors ปีที่แล้ว

    The B-Roll for this video is hilarious. Good job editor/producer.

  • @cooluser23
    @cooluser23 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    More videos like this please.
    Although tape storage for backups never went out od style.

  • @supernenechi
    @supernenechi ปีที่แล้ว +3

    General public getting to know that tech like this is still getting used is funny xD
    Yup, in datacenters, it's still great for high high density storage where you don't need to read often. Perfect for a long term backup!
    Also, cool video! Love the fact you explain in much more detail about the technical stuff!

  • @xandersnyder7214
    @xandersnyder7214 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Tape has never gone anywhere, every company I have worked at for the last 25 years have used tape, because it's cheap and efficient. I even run LTO-5 tapes at home for backups in my homelab.

  • @bluevanimaging9998
    @bluevanimaging9998 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very interesting that magnetic tape is still used for data back-up, acually makes a lot of sense for cost alone, plus being able to move media and its stored data to an off-site location in case something happens to your data centre.
    On a personal note, you've made me go and look at my old video and audio casette collections now!

  • @Monsuco
    @Monsuco ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I used to work for NOAA years ago. We archived our weather and climate data on LTO6 tapes. Each tape held 2.5 TB. We would load them into the tape machine on trays with 10 tapes apiece meaning 25 TB at a time. The machine itself held 30 trays which means 300 tapes or 750 TB. A little robot inside the tape backup machine would prepare tapes to be loaded onto a shelf outside of the machine that held hundreds of other tapes and one of my jobs was to periodically feed the machine expired tapes that it could write over and take out tapes that our archive system said should be stored on the shelf or driven over to our off-site location.

  • @endeyfire
    @endeyfire ปีที่แล้ว +3

    ayo? half as intresting has all his vids on tape?

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam ปีที่แล้ว +55

    1:22 its nice of you to tell editors to put a clown to keep us entertained. Either editors are held hostage or you pay them 6 figures

    • @-ReynardFox
      @-ReynardFox ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Every comment I see of yours is such a lame take

    • @DescendingVelocity
      @DescendingVelocity ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I can’t tell if this is a really sophisticated bot or just some guy that sits around waiting for notifications to bait top comments on every major channel

    • @rennoc6478
      @rennoc6478 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DescendingVelocity probably the second

  • @mistershirokov5067
    @mistershirokov5067 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I worked at a Data Centre and yes, some companies actually had those boxes with tapes (it’s like a glass cube where you can select a tape and the machine would take it).
    Fun fact: once a client asked if we had a magnetic room for storing those tapes; we didn’t (Tier 3 only) but it would be interesting to see one.

  • @azdrifter3968
    @azdrifter3968 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When my best friend and I were about 9 or 10 and my little brother was about 6 or 7, in the earlier 90's, we realized the boom box I got for Christmas has a mic built in. It was a few little holes in an indentation on the front of the stereo. We didn't know why, so we put a blank tape into the 2nd cassette deck, the one that records, and pushed play/record and started talking into the mic. Sure enough, it recorded our voices onto tape. We thought it was the greatest thing. We created a radio show, complete with scripts and interviews with friends. Songs were added into it all. And we had whole cassettes full of our "radio shows". Years later when I was around 18 or 19, I was digging around the shed going through old boxes of stuff from when me and my brother were kids and found the tapes. Our family had moved years ago and I had lost touch with all my old friends long ago. I put one in and it brought back so many memories. Hearing my friends voices. Hearing my own and my brother's from years back. I had completely forgot about the tapes years back, but suddenly I could remember writing the scripts and brainstorming ideas for the show I'm listening to. I spent all day listening to those tapes. I still have them at my moms house, and they still play and sound good. I'm 41 years old now and those tapes are the best pieces of my past I probably have. I thought about even burning them to CD's. Maybe one day I will.

  • @CAPAE
    @CAPAE ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The question I have is, what about rewriting data? If you store something on a rotating disc, the magnetic poles can be rewritten by reversing the flow. Older magnetic tape technology was not good for rewriting anything that needed to be changed later. This is a more permanent solution if you are not going to change the data, but people update their files All the time. Before this becomes consumer standard, that is a hurdle that will need to be jumped over.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Modern magnetic tape can be easily rewritten many times. I think that was always the case. For instance, recording with a reel-to-reel system, VCR, or cassette player was just as fast as reading.

    • @Dave01Rhodes
      @Dave01Rhodes ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Currently, tape is usually rewritten in full every time. Tape drives are really fast for reading and writing sequentially, so it’s not a big deal to do that. One of the ways they increased tape data density was shingling the tracks, which means writing to an earlier track is likely to overwrite a later track. So they either never rewrite any of the tape, or rewrite the entire tape when they back up, depending on their needs.
      But you’re right, it’s never going to become a consumer standard. Most consumers will never need that much data storage.

    • @No-mq5lw
      @No-mq5lw ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Thing is that tape might never be a consumer standard. There was a product in the late 90s called the Backer by Danmere that promised to allow you to store 3GB of data on a cheap VHS tapes, which never took off. Though I think that's in large part because there was no brains in the device to control the VHS, and you had to fiddle around with the deck and the software to get it just right.
      Flash is just too cheap, getting cheaper, and is good enough for consumer use.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@No-mq5lw There were also digital audio tape players in the 80s, and those weren't very successful. They wrote digital LPCM audio to beta or VHS tapes and could store a tremendous amount. Data is data, so instead of audio, you could presumably store any other digital data there if you wanted to. But it was quite expensive, and not many people needed so much data back then (except studios, which sometimes used U-matic tapes for digital storage).

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Nah, glue stick storage is the future.

    • @robo-joe6111
      @robo-joe6111 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Data brokers after I unleash glue-eating kids into their glue stick data storage: 😡

  • @amandah8258
    @amandah8258 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The visuals and editing in this one were *chef's kiss*

  • @personsandro
    @personsandro ปีที่แล้ว

    LOL the editing and script are absolutely hilarious. Kudos.

  • @BlakeB415
    @BlakeB415 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    LTO tapes have been around for a while and are used for archival. This isn't anything new.

  • @MozartTheGOAT
    @MozartTheGOAT ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Still probably faster than that HDD that I have in my PC since 1774

  • @Gutsquasher
    @Gutsquasher ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The reason there are 7 or 9 tracks for 6 or 8 bits is because they'll have an extra parity bit for basic error correction.

  • @stagergamer4172
    @stagergamer4172 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I find it funny how humanity constantly alternates from discs to tape

  • @zukaro
    @zukaro ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Honestly I love tape storage it's really cool (even if I don't use it myself because while the tapes may be cheap the read/write machines certainly aren't).
    It'll also likely be incredibly useful for connectomics (since connectomics deals with massive datasets).

    • @Dave01Rhodes
      @Dave01Rhodes ปีที่แล้ว

      The nice thing about LTO is that it’s been a standard for this entire century. The 18TB LTO9 tapes are out of any individual’s price range, but LTO4 or 5 can be had pretty cheaply if you want to play around with it.

  • @Kevin-oj2uo
    @Kevin-oj2uo ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I am data hoarder and this is true! Everyone is talking about Tape Storage

  • @brianmaday9227
    @brianmaday9227 ปีที่แล้ว

    "That different box is old." Such refreshing honesty.

  • @sammerritt730
    @sammerritt730 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    They used to use cassettes to store data in the 1980s and you’d plug a normal cassette player into your computer and play the audio which was then translated into information

    • @johnclement5903
      @johnclement5903 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes! I remember fondly being one of the first future nerds in Junior High back in the early '80s.
      Classroom full of TRash-80 model 3s, "networked" to the teachers computer up front using Audio Cables via the Cassette Port.
      Teacher would tell us all to type in "CLOAD" - Enter, at which point he would "CSAVE" the program out to all of us. Ridiculously slow, with no error correction or parity, but hey. IT FREAKIN' WORKED!!!
      Ah, 80s nostalgia, the best kind.

    • @synthesoul
      @synthesoul 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@johnclement5903 That's legit.

  • @KilledByThatTrain
    @KilledByThatTrain ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I really enjoyed the dancing clown! Can he make a comeback on future videos??

  • @zyansheep
    @zyansheep ปีที่แล้ว +4

    1:44, no I don't got it, there was a frickin clown in the corner distracting me!!!

    • @Hatchet1
      @Hatchet1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He told you it would happen

  • @adamsfusion
    @adamsfusion ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The key term here is "infrequent". Companies are rarely doing research via loading tapes because they're massive, slow to read, and require human intervention (generally). Companies (again generally) are storing information that's valuable, either dollar-wise or strategy-wise, but can't be acted upon, _OR_ because they're contractually/legally bound to store it for a long period.
    Tapes are selling more than mechanical hard drives, but not for the same purposes.

  • @repatch43
    @repatch43 ปีที่แล้ว

    FWIW, I recently 'got into' tape to fulfill the 'backups shouldn't be on the same type of media' issue. It's still amazingly expensive for what it is, but I found a 'sweet spot' with LTO4, where if you're crafty you can find drives with HBA and cable for around $100-$150. It's only 800GB in capacity per cartridge, and it doesn't benefit from the LTFS option available on LTO5 and beyond, but for my home lab purposes it works well enough.
    Feels VERY retro using tape, last time I used it was in the early '00s at my workplace. And using 'tar' for what it was originally designed for is kinda neat!

  • @Mertaktas93
    @Mertaktas93 ปีที่แล้ว +109

    This *AMZT66* needs to be claimed. I know it's strange and not expected at this channel but you can understand this within minutes and then you also know why all the likes go towards it

  • @JokeswithMitochondria
    @JokeswithMitochondria ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Out of context but pierce brosnan is so handsome

  • @johnmckown1267
    @johnmckown1267 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ah, the joys of tape. I started on IBM S/370 mainframes. With 3420 "round reel" tapes. Back then, many files were designed to be read sequentially. So your master account file would be on a set of tapes (yes, multiple tapes). The "keypunch" people would put update information on an 80 column physical card. We'd run a "batch job" which would read the tape and card (both sorted in the same order). When the "key" one the tape record matched the one on the card, the in storage record would be updated. The tape record, updated or not, would then be written onto another, output, tape. Of course the card input could indicate to create a new record or delete an old one. A deletion simply meant don't written the in storage to the new output tape.
    You haven't known fear like having a tape break. Well, maybe you have when you accidentally deleted a file and emptied the trash can in Windows. But the fun was the fact that the tape drives were stupid. If the tape broke, the tape motor would continue on, taking all the tape off the reel.

    • @bluevanimaging9998
      @bluevanimaging9998 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I started on IBM 370s as well. (1980 I think). Yeah, punch cards, tapes and removable platters from multi-disk drives. Plus programming on paper sheets, then getting code punched up - and putting JCL cards fore and aft of the deck - don't drop it! Too many stories, but very interesting to know that magnetic tape is still being used for back up storage, makes sense actually.

  • @quinterbeck
    @quinterbeck ปีที่แล้ว

    2:36 Dancing genetic technicians is the best stock footage I've ever seen

  • @FacterinoCommenterino
    @FacterinoCommenterino ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Today's Fact: In 2020, researchers used quantum entanglement to teleport information between two chips in a silicon-based system, a major step forward for quantum computing.

  • @2Manchester
    @2Manchester ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Love the 🤡, we need more Cameo of him in future episode.

  • @lzh4950
    @lzh4950 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A disadvantage I read about tape backup though is that each time the read head rubs against the tape to read/write/erase data, friction between the two wears out the tape, so after ~45x backups the tape is so worn that it might lead to data on it being unreadable & thus corrupted

  • @A.M.T.P.
    @A.M.T.P. ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Fun Fact - CERN (Large Hadron Collider people, a little thing called the World Wide Web, and many others) still use tapes to store data. The reason is simple - tapes are much cheaper than magnetic disks, they contain several TB of data on one cassette, they last a very long time and, most importantly, they can read real data from tapes from 30-50 years ago thanks to the simplicity of this technology.

    • @gradata
      @gradata ปีที่แล้ว

      When they migrate to larger tapes, they sell the old ones as souvenirs, with the data still on them.

    • @rogerdickerson6924
      @rogerdickerson6924 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We we proud to deliver our tape and library systems to CERN for many years, maybe decades. They asked for some cool features that we designed for them, and then pushed out to other customers later.
      The thing about the track pitch in the video, 9 track was from the 70s. We actually had 36 bit heads that wrote 160 "wraps" along the tape surface. The tape was a lot shorter, but carried 5760 paralell magnetic tracks wide in the half inch width. 12TB uncompressed capacity, typical 3 to 1 compression.
      One version presented the tape as a removable USB storage, showed up in file manager same as a thumb drive...

  • @troysvisualarts
    @troysvisualarts 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Interesting to see magnetic tape making a comeback! I was a 90s kid-teen so I primarily used 5.25 & 3.5" floppy disks and hard drive on my PC back then so I missed the data tape era.

  • @adamleblanc5294
    @adamleblanc5294 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Tape storage never went away. It never stopped being used for long term storage. My University uses it to archive records and to take their nightly backups, for example.

  • @Yoshiyosh
    @Yoshiyosh ปีที่แล้ว

    Love the "Magnets...... 2!" bit at 3:29

  • @morezco
    @morezco 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    2:49 I’ve never heard of hard drives lasting 285 years

    • @x5px
      @x5px 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Fr it's more like 10 years

  • @diyargungor
    @diyargungor ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As a European $7 for a coffee seems kinda very expensive (around 2.5€ here in Belgium and for a very good quality, but yeah I have seen some company using 30Tb tape storage for archive which they send to a bank for off-site storage backup weekly.

    • @ilgiusto6885
      @ilgiusto6885 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In Italy,now,1,20 €....!!!

    • @diyargungor
      @diyargungor ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ilgiusto6885 Really ?! I am a bit surprised by the difference and also 1,20 € is so much less expensive. I think it is above 2€ since long time here...

    • @ilgiusto6885
      @ilgiusto6885 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@diyargungor i living in One turist Town, Diano Marina, Liguria,near Sanremo and Montecarlo (Riviera dei fiori)and 1,2 € Is max cost of One espresso, but there Is the Little bars Whit same quality at One euro!

  • @fast-toast
    @fast-toast ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Tape could be used for long term storge but is occasionally scanned and put into hardrives for it to be more easily accessed

  • @Tinker_Box
    @Tinker_Box 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Your producer dancing on the screen was quite helpful.

  • @user-ff6pq1eg8x
    @user-ff6pq1eg8x 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Imagine making Ultra HD Camcorders using Magnetic Tape Cartridges? It would feel like loading a film cartridge into a movie camera! Yeah bring it on.

  • @ciCCapROSTi
    @ciCCapROSTi ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Tape storage never went away. Archiving data was ALWAYS done on tape by the big archivers.

  • @ahadmrauf
    @ahadmrauf 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    2:36 Now that looks like a fun photo shoot 😎. Sad, every time I wore a bunny suit was in a boring, stale clean room, I wish I got to take mine out for fun dance scenes like this back in undergrad.

  • @jmwburner
    @jmwburner ปีที่แล้ว

    This actually helped me understand an aspect of my job

  • @TheOne_6
    @TheOne_6 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    now we just need those video tapes again

  • @kharadinbrahman
    @kharadinbrahman 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    don't know about those wide tapes , but the home computers of 80s actually did not record straight 0s and 1 onto tape, but used modulation/demodulation like dial up modems, and there was frequency modulation, not sure about amplitude modulation, and phase modulation also. some systems had information written in blocks and a checksum would follow, and duplicate blocks in case of any damage/ deterioration of part of a tape...

  • @rfvtgbzhn
    @rfvtgbzhn 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    From what I know tape isn't really used for data that could be accessed at any time, like google docs (though tape could explain why the version history of google docs sometimes takes minutes to be displayed), but mainly for backup.

  • @firewalldaprotogen
    @firewalldaprotogen ปีที่แล้ว

    im hoping that some day i can get my hands on a tape drive . it sounds super neat and useful for all the files i barely use

  • @MrPriebster
    @MrPriebster ปีที่แล้ว

    These tapes are what I use at work! We are up to 45 TB tapes now