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Imagine
Lady Luck smiles and you have more currency notes than
can fit into your wallet. What will you do? Reject those
notes just for lack of storage space or compress them
to fit into your wallet? The same applies to data storage.
It cannot be rejected or deleted merely due to lack
of storage space.
The days are over when hard discs of 20 megabytes (MB)
with some floppy discs of 1.44 MBs were enough to store
data. Now in the era of gigabytes, companies have to
equip themselves with the latest storage devices. New
technologies have come out with a wide variety of drives
under various configurations. Audio and image/video
is predominant in digital design/entertainment and these
storage drives are ideal to backup a huge amount of
data. Mobile storage devices make large quantities of
data portable.
Tape drives are being used to store data that
are seldom accessed, where as CD-ROMs are used
for frequent accesses (which can hold around 650 MB
of data). Zip drives, Jaz drives and ORB drives
are becoming user-friendly over older tape drives and
magneto optical (MO) drives. They are gaining popularity
because of the huge space they have to store data and
the incredible speed with which this data can be accessed.
Zip drives do support SCSI, IDE and Universal Serial
Bus ports, but they do not come in various capacities.
Optical Super Density (OSD) technology seeks to provide
MO drives with higher capacity at lower cost.
Where
and how can these drives be driven?
Obviously they will be driven depending on the requirements.
Zip and Jaz drives being portable, offer 100 MB to
5.2 GB with good rates of data transfer. Tape drives
are used as mass storage options that require space
for gigabytes though they are slow in transferring the
stored data.
The following matrix illustrates storage capacities
of various drives:
| Zip,
Jaz and MO drives |
Tape
and DAT drives |
| Small
storage requirement |
Medium
Storage requirement |
Large
storage requirement |
Small
storage requirement |
Medium
Storage requirement |
Large
storage requirement |
|
Seagate TapeStore
8GB
Tarvan
and
Seagate TapeStore
DAT8 GB
|
Tandberg Data
SLR 24
and
HP SureStore
DAT 24e
|
HP SureStore
DAT 40 |
Iomega
Click Drive |
Iomega Jaz,
Fujitsu MO
and
OlympusTurbo MO 64011
|
Sony RMO
Drive 5.2 GB
and
HP SureStore
Optical 5.2 GB
|
Source:Chip-India magazine
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