Thirty-five years ago, I worked on a company’s project that included replacing nine-inch data tapes with hard drives. One of the senior managers asked me how many seconds it takes to rewind a data file on a hard drive. He didn’t believe my “couple of milliseconds” answer.
I’ve worked with many types of magnetic tape, from audio reel-reel, compact cassette, 9 track data tapes, cartridges of several types, then on to diskettes of several densities and sizes. Hard drives from 340K with fixed 8-inch platters that were a b—tch to replace, to 5 inch, easily replaced to 3 inch plug-in, to SSDs that will fit in a pocket. Along the way I used magnetic “bubble” memory, punched paper tape, USB “thumb” drives, SD cards, and Micro SD cards. Tech changes so fast, it’s hard to keep up.
Pharmakeus Ubik about 1 year ago
6250 characters per inch is the way!
Zykoic about 1 year ago
There was a server command to mount tape. A tech would have to retrieve the magnetic tape and put it on the computer’s tape machine.
William Bednar Premium Member about 1 year ago
He’s playing an old, High School recording of Oppenheimer reciting the value of PI to 120 decimal places.
jvo about 1 year ago
At 800bpi you could put a little ferrite dust gizmo on the tape and read the data bits by eye.
Doug K about 1 year ago
This is reel-to-reel funny?
ThreeDogDad Premium Member about 1 year ago
Thirty-five years ago, I worked on a company’s project that included replacing nine-inch data tapes with hard drives. One of the senior managers asked me how many seconds it takes to rewind a data file on a hard drive. He didn’t believe my “couple of milliseconds” answer.
Comics are the first thing to read about 1 year ago
Nothing quite like an IBMB 3420 with its vacuum columns!
markkahler52 about 1 year ago
Video killed the radio star, too… Didn’t it?!
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
Obviously drawn by someone who never had to unsnarl a reel-to-reel tape.
cknoblo Premium Member about 1 year ago
I’ve worked with many types of magnetic tape, from audio reel-reel, compact cassette, 9 track data tapes, cartridges of several types, then on to diskettes of several densities and sizes. Hard drives from 340K with fixed 8-inch platters that were a b—tch to replace, to 5 inch, easily replaced to 3 inch plug-in, to SSDs that will fit in a pocket. Along the way I used magnetic “bubble” memory, punched paper tape, USB “thumb” drives, SD cards, and Micro SD cards. Tech changes so fast, it’s hard to keep up.