Recently, I was surprised at how affordable LTO cassettes sell for. The data/cost ratio is extremely high. However, I've been unable to find drives under several thousand USD.
What hardware do hobby archivists usually work with?
Regular 3.5 inch hard drives, hundreds of them, with some software raid to deal with dead drives. All connected by USB because spinning rust can barely fill USB3 bandwidth anyway.
This setup is cheap to begin with (just $50 gets you your first few TB's), and scales well (127 USB devices per host)
I don’t think many hobbyists use LTO - for backups, being offline is a huge advantage, but for most hobbyists, it’s an issue. A lot of LTO tapes are written to never be read again. The closest thing to a lot of HDDs would be a tape library and, if a single LTO drive is expensive, a library is eye watering.
Recently, I was surprised at how affordable LTO cassettes sell for. The data/cost ratio is extremely high. However, I've been unable to find drives under several thousand USD.
What hardware do hobby archivists usually work with?
Regular 3.5 inch hard drives, hundreds of them, with some software raid to deal with dead drives. All connected by USB because spinning rust can barely fill USB3 bandwidth anyway.
This setup is cheap to begin with (just $50 gets you your first few TB's), and scales well (127 USB devices per host)
What USB hubs would you suggest? How do you organize the fan-out from PC to drive.
I don’t think many hobbyists use LTO - for backups, being offline is a huge advantage, but for most hobbyists, it’s an issue. A lot of LTO tapes are written to never be read again. The closest thing to a lot of HDDs would be a tape library and, if a single LTO drive is expensive, a library is eye watering.