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HDD cost small dollars and low skill.

Expecting even a nerdy user to successfully restore something from a cobbled together LTO setup is prepper nonsense.



HDD cost small dollars only for small amounts of archived data, i.e. up to 100 TB or 200 TB at most.

For greater amounts of data, HDDs become too expensive and this is the main reason to switch to tapes.

Obviously, for someone who is certain of never needing more than a few tens of TB of storage space it would be foolish to use LTO.

On the other hand, for someone storing 500 TB, it is foolish to use HDDs, because tapes are more reliable, more compact, faster for sequential transfers, i.e. the actual backup and restoring, and cheaper.

It is as simple as that. The decision of using HDDs or LTO is strictly determined by the amount of data that must be stored.

The argument that HDDs should be fine for most non-technical people is correct only because those people do not store much data.


99.9% of home users looking for long term backup solutions have less than 100TB of data.


I'm confused - I and many others basically have these cobbled together LTO setups. I'm only "Prepping" by finally moving some of my backups away from home, so in case of a fire or whatever I'm not out of luck. You could cobble one together now for anything from OG DAT tape to LTO-10 for ~10K, if you need. So big fire happens, you file an insurance claim, and as part of the payout buy whatever setup you need, or hire some specialists. Once we are at LTO-20, there's no reason to assume LTO-10 and older drives are totally gone from the used market?

I'm not preparing for some asteroid impact level event, in that case the loss of my backups will presumably not really matter all that much.


That’s babble to 80% of the nerdy HN audience. “Copy your stuff to this usb drive and keep it somewhere you aren’t” is easy for almost anyone to comprehend, accessible but operationally difficult.


> That’s babble to 80% of the nerdy HN audience.

Maybe you're having issues with their writing style or something but the tech is simple. They copy their stuff to a tape and keep it somewhere they aren't. If a disaster happens they'll buy a new tape drive.

Nothing weird. No "prepper nonsense".


Won't they just get binned by a future generation anyway, like Aunt Shirley's carefully-preserved collection of 35mm film negatives?




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