Spectre & Meltdown

TeoZ teoz at neo.rr.com
Thu Jan 4 19:50:02 CST 2018


Hard drives NEVER keep up. Bragging about how many DVD's (90's technology) 
you can store on current HD means little to people who have ultra HD Blueray 
videos that take up to 100GB of space. Heck even a single game download can 
be 50GB these days.

And I wouldn't mind one of those old networked DVD changers (I think Sony 
sold them commercially) to play around with.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Fred Cisin via cctalk
Sent: Thursday, January 04, 2018 6:53 PM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: Spectre & Meltdown

On Thu, 4 Jan 2018, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
> Funny,   I've been saying since the 1980s that it you have something
> that's critical to your survival, keep it offline.
> Until any of my PCs develop the ability to go to my storage cabinet and
> fetch a DVD and load it into itself, I'm not sorried.

So, that Exabyte Tape/cartridge Silo might not be such a good idea.

I always wanted Keith Hensen's "Kubik"? CD changer.  Big "carousel slide
tray" full of 240?! CDs/DVDs, in a square box, with a drive in each
corner.  The drives were SCSI, and the load/unload/select control was
RS232. The big square boxes could be stacked, for a larger collection, and
there was a trivial mod to make the tray removable, so that the top box
could be swapped with as many trays as you had shelf space for.

'course hard drives caught up, and I now have about a thousand DVDs in
MP4s on a shirt pocket HDD.  (including ALL of the Doctor Who's that were
released on DVD, Red Dwarf 1 - XII, Dark Matter, Torchwood, Twilight Zone,
Prisoner, Marx Brothers, Doc Martin, One Foot In The Grave, etc.) The DVD
images (V .MP4) take over 5TB. 


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