Tape isn't dead: HP
HP won’t let go of old storage technologies as it tries to transition customers to new ones, according to company officials at the HP World Tour in Beijing.
HP won’t let go of old storage technologies as it tries to transition customers to new ones, according to company officials at the HP World Tour in Beijing.
New Zealand-based AMI Insurance has discarded its physical tape storage for a virtual tape library to back-up its critical business data.
Backup vendor Quantum has announced a new enterprise tape library to help IT managers deal with tape consolidation in tiered storage environments as data growth skyrockets.
It may be 40 years since man first set foot on the Moon, but only now will people see the “real life” quality footage of Apollo 11 Moonwalk thanks to NASA and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation's (CSIRO) Parkes Radio Observatory.
Australia’s national geoscience research and information organisation, Geoscience Australia, will spend some $500,000 on new data storage capacity.
Mention Shakespeare and everyone spouts "To be or not to be." Mention backup, and the question becomes, "To tape or not to tape?" Is tape dead, or do tape-based backup systems still have a place in the modern small business?