Despite some industry observers declaring tape to be a dying technology, it
is alive and well through the Linear Tape-Open (LTO) format, experts at this
week's
Storage
Expo have maintained.
The LTO Program is a consortium comprising HP, IBM and Quantum, which
developed the open standard licensed by most tape backup vendors.
Since LTO's inception in September 2000 over 100 million cartridges have been
shipped worldwide, equating to over 40 exabytes of compressed cartridge
capacity.
The benefits of tape archiving - such as its write-once, read-many format,
the fact that it is easy to transport and store off-site and electronically
inaccessible during storage thereby enhancing security and preventing
alterations, and the very low total cost of ownership - still make it a
compelling proposition to the vast majority of businesses today.
Bruce Master, senior programme manager of tape storage at IBM, believes that
using a combination of disk and tape in a well-managed tiered environment gives
companies the best of both worlds.
This approach allows them to readily access the data they need from time to
time, while lowering storage costs for data they need to keep for compliance and
regulatory reasons but only rarely access.
"A hybrid approach, blending disk and tape, is necessary for effective backup
and archiving, and users still turn to tape as the lowest cost and most reliable
medium for long-term data storage," he said.
Highlighting its continued stability and growth, LTO is currently in its
fourth generation, with LTO-5 on track for release next year and the roadmap for
LTO-6 already laid out.
Furthermore, LTO-4 has helped address the problem of security by adding
hardware-based encryption, which means data is secured as it written to the
tape, with key management software now straightforward and simple to use.
LTO-5 promises to bring 1.7TB of native storage per cartridge, helping to
make it even easier for users to back up large data sets without having
constantly to change cartridges.
The LTO Program said that, because the format is an open standard, it ensures
that all media is interoperable, giving peace of mind to customers, enhancing
competition, improving reliability and preventing vendor lock-in.
Another part of the standard is that every new generation is read-compatible
back two generations and write-compatible with the previous generation, allowing
companies to rest assured that their long-term backups will be accessible should
they need them down the line.
Developers are also creating ever more detailed and granular indexing and
search tools, thereby speeding up the location and retrieval of specific pieces
of information as required.
"Tape will be around for the foreseeable future," concluded Mark O'Malley,
strategic marketing manager for storage devices at Quantum.
"There simply is no other technology around today, or even on the horizon,
that can compete with the value of tape."
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