> Not sure if it is important to many people, but tapes take a lot less
> electricity than online disks.

do you really care?  an active disk is about 15W, inactive 5W
and asleep nearly zero.  even assuming idle-but-spinning, 
I make that as about $2/year.

tapes are wonderful in every way except one: they're finicky
and difficult to care for properly.  for instance, do you have 
a humidity and temperature-controlled place to store them?
and have you actually logged the temp/hum for that to see 
whether, for instance, it gets warm on weekends?

if I were forced to use tapes, I would insist on making 2+ copies
of everything.  note that this clearly hurt's tape's competitiveness
WRT price, size, bandwidth, etc.

I don't see any new tape installations that are not driven by 
secondary factors such as big piles of old data already on tape,
or someone wanting to physically move the media into a vault.

(on that topic, I don't buy the idea that tape's less vulnerable 
to hacking, either.  just because your backup is on disk doesn't
mean that it's online or accessible.  similarly, just because 
your tape is in a separate cabinet doesn't mean that a sufficiently
motivated badguy could not get the tape put into some drive...)

regards, mark hahn.
(buying many TB of disk this year and no tape)

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