Exabyte versus DAT (Summ
Nathan Wilson
wilson at csli.stanford.edu
Wed Jul 11 05:02:30 AEST 1990
A while ago I posted asking about the pros and cons of these two mass
storage devices. Since I received almost as many requests for a summary
as notes containing useful information, I'm posting a summary. From the
responses and my own research I've learned the following:
1) Many more people have Exabyte than DAT. I did not get a single
response from someone who actually uses a DAT drive.
2) Exabyte's error checking alogorithm is supposed to be significantly
better.
3) DAT drives have very fast seek times, but who cares for backups.
4) Exabyte distributors tend to market for only one brand of computer.
Some of the DAT drives that I've gotten info on work with a truckload of
different computers, Suns, DEC, HP, IBM, Apple. As far as I can tell this
is another uninteresting difference since neither of them should get moved
around a lot.
5) Exabyte hardware tends to break a fair amount, but at least they tell
you there is a problem. From the responses:
"I've had several of them break: doors jamming, unable to read/write (they
give you errors, don't worry), the little green light burning out.... I've
only had about 10 tapes fail so far in the past 18 months [ out of roughly
900 ]. Most of these tapes got stuck in the tape drives because the
drives are so cheap."
"(Our Exabyte) drives have a hard time living on the SCSI bus with other
peripherals. They seem to hang sometimes, forcing a reboot."
6) Nobody's saying (knows?) anything about the reliability of DAT
hardware.
The final upshot was that we are getting an Exabyte.
In total, I received 9 responses and 6 requests for a summary.
The responses were from:
Ted Lemon, Gregg Townsend, Tom Slezak, Paul A. Sustman, Art Hays,
Henry Clark, John Richardson, Bill Heiser, and Joe Pruett (hi, Joey :-)
Thanks again!
Nathan Wilson
Teleos Research
nathan%teleos.com at ai.sri.com
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