----- "compdoc" <compdoc at hotrodpc.com> wrote: > The tape is easily replaceable, without > having to worry about bad connectors that can plague hot > swap drive bay equipment. I really worry about your staff if you have damaged hot swap anything. How many insertions are they rated for? According to its data sheet, a lower end Tyco/AMP SATA connector measures up against EIA-364-09C (i.e., "Mate and unmated [sic] connector assemblies for 500 cycles at a maximum rate of 200 cycles/hour.") Other relevant forces are on there, and you can read the rest if you're interested here: http://tinyurl.com/ybnacp7 Basically, if you break them, you're doing something wrong or you are buying equipment with counterfeit or excessively substandard parts. I wouldn't consider this to be on the scale of a plague. > At $45 per tape for 320G of storage, it competes with hard > drives. In case of tape drive failure, the tapes still work > with the new drive. And with scsi or sata based tape drives, > speed is not a problem. Plus the cost of the tape drive (~$700), plus time, increased risk (longer backup duration means more risk), deployment flexibility, etc etc etc. > Combined with disk based network storage, tapes have a place > in IT. Yes, archival storage. -- Christopher G. Stach II http://ldsys.net/~cgs/