Sony doubles up with AIT-4

Published: 21 March 2004 y., Sunday
Sony has launched the fourth generation of its AIT (Advanced Intelligent Tape) format at CeBIT, doubling the capacity of the previous AIT-3 to reach 200GB of uncompressed data per cartridge, or around half a terabyte compressed. The increase is in line with Sony's roadmap for AIT, which also includes fifth and sixth generations at 400GB and 500GB respectively. AIT-4 is read/write compatible with AIT-3 and can read AIT-1 and 2 tapes as well. Sony also offers write-once read-many (Worm) AIT tapes for archiving and data retention. Mark Lufkin, Sony Europe's storage sales & marketing boss, says there were 500,000 AIT drives and 10 million AIT media in use during 2003, and AIT-4 certainly provides plenty of growth for those existing users. It should keep Sony in competition with LTO and SuperDLT too, and as the figure of 20 cassettes per drive suggests, it has sold a lot of AIT into tape libraries and autoloaders. IDC says that AIT is doing pretty well, gaining market share in Europe and leading the race to supplant DDS-DAT. However, its tape research analyst Gavin Metier adds that the arrival of the fifth generation DAT-72 is slowing the decline in DAT sales.
Šaltinis: theregister.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Google Makeover Gets 'Personal'

Looking to stave off aggressive competition from rivals such as Yahoo and Microsoft, search technology powerhouse Google has started testing a personalized Web search feature more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Ballmer rues Web-search decision

Internet searching is a hot technology business, but you wouldn't know it from looking at Microsoft more »

Lindows plans US gov backed global assault on Windows trademark

Lindows.com intends to use a US Department of Commerce programme to have Microsoft's trademarks of Windows invalidated worldwide more »

CeBIT'2004: All in One Screen

Why have two or more screens when you can make do with just one? more »

Sony Ericsson banks on 3G appeal

The future looks bright for third generation mobiles, according to the boss of phone maker Sony Ericsson more »

New Standard Would Let Devices Communicate by Touch

Visa has already distributed millions of so-called contactless credit cards cards that can be read by simply waving them in front of small machines more »

The "Swissmemory USB Victorinox"

It's got everything from a toothpick to a bottle opener and screw driver more »

No Bigger than A Pen

German company Siemens introduced its latest contribution to the mini phone rage: the PenPhone more »

Dancing Robots

Kunitake Ando, President of Sony, unveils the Japanese company's contribution to artificial intelligence: a dancing robot more »