Hi,
Totally agree with this!
There is a resurgence in tape due to everyone desperately trying to implement air-gapped copies of their backup data for cyber-resiliency purposes. And tape still has the lowest cost per TB for long term data retention.
The LTO roadmap goes up to at least generation 12, which will take us past 2024. I don't know of any traditional hard disk vendors who can show a longterm product roadmap that demonstrates a commitment to not just capacity increases but also performance and functionality improvements. IBM Enterprise Tape has a similar roadmap in place.
Public cloud storage is still huge success story for tape, with a large proportion of unstructured data being stored on physical tape media across all of the major cloud vendors.
Long live tape!!!
Regards
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Darren Sanders
Technical Architect - Data Protection & Storage
Celerity Ltd
http://www.celerity-uk.comwww.linkedin.com/in/darren-sanders-a8770a4#ibmchampion storage
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Original Message:
Sent: Wed November 04, 2020 10:36 AM
From: LIZBETH RAMIREZ LETECHIPIA
Subject: Is tape dead?
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LIZBETH RAMIREZ LETECHIPIA
Original Message:
Sent: Wed October 28, 2020 01:25 PM
From: Helmut Muehleis
Subject: Is tape dead?
Hello all,
my saying since twenty and more years is very easy: 'Tape will die but not before Disk'!
With best tape wishes,
Helmut
Von meinem Samsung Galaxy Smartphone gesendet.
Original Message:
Sent: 10/26/2020 11:39:00 AM
From: LIZBETH RAMIREZ LETECHIPIA
Subject: Is tape dead?
Tons of articles had been written about tape being dead, almost dead and semi dead.
IBM today pre-announced the introduction of LTO 9 technology, what do you think?
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LIZBETH RAMIREZ LETECHIPIA
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