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We are using LTO here. The tapes are supposed to last a long time and we have only had one become unusable because it was dropped off a high shelf and broke open. I would recommend the kind of LTO that is mountable via FTP or direct access. Right now, we have a LTO-5 setup that uses a proprietary interface. This limits access to whichever station it is on. Our 1st gen of LTO was LTO-3 and we could get to it from any desktop via a ftp client. Although you still had to go put the correct tape in. My biggest challenges with LTO are:
- It's slow. Not to copy once it gets going, but to find which tape I need, find the tape, then wait for it to spin up, etc..
- You can't just pop the tape in to see what's on it with our proprietary system. A manager is required to keep track of the contents.
- Without spending thousands more for a double bay drive, we haven't found an easy way to create duplicate copies of the tapes. What we do now is cumbersome.
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