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LTO-5 Ultrium
OK. Tape may be quite dull and certainly
very old as technology goes, but it’s far from past it. In fact, it’s
turning out to be something of a hero. Without tape, the world’s
biggest computer users would be stuck – with no practical way to
archive billions of bytes of information. Supercomputer users like
Argonne National Labs or CERN’s Large Hadron Collider project generate
millions of gigabytes annually. And for every giantcomputer user, there
are thousands more smaller organisations running out of space and ideas
about how to keep their information safe and sound.
It’s estimated that by 2015, internet traffic may be fifty times
greater than in 2006. So rather than waste time exploring
alternatives, HP has continued to invest indeveloping high performance,
LTO tape media. The latest HP Ultrium LTO-5 storage solution can archive 3.0 TB on a single tape, at a transfer rate of280 MB/second. And it won’t stop there.
It costs next to nothing to keep it in a library. And on those
rareoccasions when you need it again, you can count on getting all the
databack. Extreme environmental, drop, shock and vibration testing in
thereal world and in HP’s labs prove it far beyond user
expectations,with a guaranteed archival life of 30 years. So for
large-scale archives, it’s always tape. With the capacity tocompress
and store vast amounts of data, fully compliant with international
legislation, the LTO format is widely supported by majorvendors and
computer users as an essential component of tiered storage strategies.
And it remains one of the pillars of HP’s storage portfolio.
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