BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
Tor wrote:
On the other hand I've had nearly the same experience with DAT, I used to work with an SGI Indy at home, and synchronise with work by bringing DAT tapes forth and back. It was so unreliable that I got flashbacks to my experience with the Dragon more than a decade earlier.
The bulk of such problems were caused by using cartridges that were not certified for digital data storage (DDS). Despite appearances, DAT is not the same as DDS.
When I wrote DAT I really meant DDS. I know the difference - I still have my Sony DAT recorder somewhere - and I would never try to use those tapes for digital storage. The tapes I used, and found unreliable, were genuine DDS tapes, these were from work and the sysadm always got the best he could find of media, whatever the type.
It's just that in Norway we always called them DAT, never DDS (DAT audio was never used much, I was an exception in that regard, I bought my recorder on a foreign travel). It didn't occur to me that it could be different elsewhere. [Edit: What I meant to say, I wasn't aware that maybe not everyone would call DDS tapes 'DAT'. My fault.]
There are still some DDS4 drives in some IBM computers at work, we call them DAT..
I should mention that we say DAT, not dee-ay-tee, so DDS is a much clumsier word to use [which is why I don't say DDS - can't speak it as a word]. (We don't pronunce LED ell-ee-dee either, we say it as a word. Approximately as the word 'lead' (the metal). So I would write 'a LED', not 'an LED'.)
To this day I consider [DDS] unreliable. I still have to use it now and then, on those aforementioned IBM computers.