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

Microsoft Demos Palladium Security

Users of Microsoft's forthcoming security software will have the ability to turn its protection on and off at will, the company says more »

HP Adds SpamSubtract to New PCs

Computer maker Hewlett-Packard has joined the fight against unsolicited e-mails, announcing plans to pre-load anti-spam software from Mass.-based interMute, Inc. on the newest lines of HP Pavilion and Compaq Presario desktops more »

Radio Goes Digital

Broadcast Medium to Offer Better Sound and New Features more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

W3C, Unicode move to head off character clash

The Unicode Technical Committee and the World Wide Web Consortium's (W3C) Internationalization Working Group jointly issued a technical report Friday that clarifies areas of conflict between the two standards more »

Majority support referendum for EU changes

Finns reject proposal for EU President more »

At Last, the Web Hits 100 MPH

The spread of broadband may finally allow the Net to reach its full commercial potential -- and change the way people live more »

A central concern

DOJ Net Surveillance Under Fire more »

PeerEnabler

KaZaA founders to 'borrow' your PC to distribute content more »

Credit insurers launch internet service

Credit insurer Lietuvos Draudimo Kreditu Draudimas launches an internet service aimed at companies which insure against customer insolvency more »