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Magento-optical disks/drives

Mk.558

Well-known member
I heard about magneto-optical disks on a internet-curiosity spree.

Apparently, they were around just before the dawn of CDs, and are still around in Japan.

Any other details? Experiences? Long-term durability?

Seems like every long-term storage has major issues: DVD/CD, disk rot, jitter and dye deteroriation; hard disk and other magnetic media have issues with magnetic stability, driver board issues, spindle this or that; tapes get stretched, decay, separation of oxide layer etc etc. One person even advised (which seems the best overall) the concept of not storage, but movage; you upgrade and translate into the current primary working format, but that can be irrelevant for disk images, encoded archives, large volumes of text or word processing documents. (If I had 5K+ MacWrite documents, which I don't, I'd need some major motivation to copy all of them to modern formats.)

Note that floptical disks are not the same as magneto-optical disks.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
MO are a dead end now, I don't think anyone is still making them. The last units I know about were 5.2GB drives and those were known to be buggy as hell.

The media itself is encased in a sturdy case and the stuff is supposed to last a very long time (look up the wiki). Its like CDR but with a phase change while you burn for added stability.

I have half a dozen 1.3GB (650MB/side you can flip them and use both sides) drives (5.25" SCSI with tons of media) and a 3.5" 230MB drive (single sided). Never seen a bad cart before.

Before MO was popular you also had WORM drives (recordable media in a strong case but not rewritable), I have a few drives for IBM PS/2 systems.

 

waynestewart

Well-known member
MO disks seem to be pretty durable. Never had one go bad but I don't use them a lot nowadays. I use mine to back up the hard drives on IIgs's and IIe's. Nowadays I'm in need of multi-terrabyte backup. I fondly remember buying a CD burner in the early 1990s. I could backup my whole hard drive several time over on a single CD.

There's good reason to move forward. I've recovered old files for people that had the media but no drive to read it. Sometimes I've also had to convert the files to something a modern computer could use.

 

CelGen

Well-known member
MO's were essentially a reliable but more expensive Zip. They had an equally similar amout of market push for a while too to try and make it standard but it was still way too expensive.

Last real product I ever saw that used MO was minidisc.

 

shred

Well-known member
I remember them being horribly expensive, but pretty reliable. Far, far superior to the Zip/Jaz/Syquest junk that used to die and lose data when you least expected it.

 

jruschme

Well-known member
Speaking of which... what is required to use a MO drive on a Mac?

I have an old MaxOptix drive around here somewhere that I used a *long* time ago with a Sun. Any special jumper settings (optical vs. direct access)?

JR

 

ojfd

Well-known member
Is that Tahiti drive or some Fujitsu in Maxoptix enclosure?

If former - I don't know, If later, check which one it is and google for manual.

 

jruschme

Well-known member
ISTR, it's some version of the Tahiti.

Back in the day, we had a bunch of them in Artecon enclosures and rand them under Solaris 6 using a special driver. For later versions of Sol, I recall that we had to change a jumper so the drive identified itself as a disk drive rather than an optical drive. I'm assuming that if I set the dip/jumper that way, then it should just work under Mac OS X with Disk Utility, no?

JR

 

Mk.558

Well-known member
There are some 9.1 GB IDE drives on eBay...

If I used compression, that would do quite well.

 

Cory5412

Daring Pioneer of the Future
Staff member
At 9.1GB, you may be looking at a DVD-RAM drive. I do not recall seeing any >5GB MO stuff. (In fact, >1.3GB MO stuff seems to be exceedingly rare.)

It would be interesting to hear what people do for backups on their old computers. I never bothered to backup my old Macs when I was using them, but I've been wanting to get back into the "actually using old machines for stuff" scene once I'm done with my classes, and have been thinking about the hardware investments I may need to make, in terms of data storage and data backup.

I know a lot of old UNIX machines had DAT/DDS drives, and some Macs had them, and MO seems popular for its almost legendary reliability.

As backups for modern machines go:

Another technology along the same kind of thought (optical disk in a cartridge) is Sony's Professional Disc. Unfortunately, these are very very expensive, and for 10x the cost, have the same capacities as BD-R and BD-RE. (Which, I priced it out six months or so ago, is the cheapest way to make a single backup of 6TB of data, not counting the costs of running machines or sitting in front of the machine swapping 100 disks in and out.

In a lot of cases, the easiest and cheapest way to "backup" (at least to have one working backup copy of info) is to back up onto another hard disk. (I've been having good luck with a 4TB Seagate external drive, it was "only" $250, and it holds most of the data I need to back up. I'd like to supplement it with one or two more when Windows 8 and storage pooling comes a little bit further along, or get Open Indiana or Solaris 11 or FreeBSD and some ZFS pools going.)

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
For 68k/ppc machines backup I use DAT drives and/or MO disks. Even older DAT drives can backup the whole HD of a 68K/early ppc and do it pretty fast using native SCSI and software. Mostly once I get a machine setup like I like it I just image the drive to tape to have incase I hose something up. All drivers and disk images are dumped onto my server which gets archived once in a while using DDS4 or AIT2 drives. It would be faster just to mirror a server drive with an external USB2 drive and put it on the shelf. I kick myself for not getting more 2TB HDs when they were under $70 before the flooding tripple prices for HDs.

There are more modern ways of doing backup, but I like using the older tech (which is dirt cheap anyway) with old machines. I just find the older tape drives interesting , same with removable carts. I have a bunch of WORM drives for my old IBM PS/2 systems (talk about pricey equipment back in the day) you can access in DOS. QIC drives are very reliable (before Travan anyway), and who doesn't like Syquest and Bournouli drives? I also dabble in DLT drives plus the million CDRW drives I have (quite a few SCSI externals which I seem to get in any larger hauls I find). You can fit a whole 68k driver archive on one 1.3GB MO disk.

 

Mk.558

Well-known member
For me, it''s about backup of irreplaceables, such as archives or older versions which are very hard to find. I try to make it a habit where every time (especially under Windows) I find a useful application, I backup the archive I downloaded, in case I might need it again or that version is suddenly replaced by a higher version which does the same thing but tweaks a few things and bumps up the OS requirement.

9.1 GB MO disks

Right now all my backups occupy about 170GB on disk, and that is before I should do other things like backup of CDs.

I don't know how all you lot are trifling with multi-terabyte disks :p I could probably backup every single thing I possibly have on 250GB.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
I collect Amiga/Atari (800 and ST)/C64/DOS + Win 3.1/Sun Sparc/etc so I have lots of old archives to store. Plus I have music and some video on my server.

 

jruschme

Well-known member
Well, I dug out the one I had in storage. It's a MaxOptix T4-1300 which, I assume, is a Tahiti 4 drive. Unfortunately, either my Google-fu is failing or the jumpers are nowhere to be found on the net.

JR

 

Cory5412

Daring Pioneer of the Future
Staff member
I don't know how all you lot are trifling with multi-terabyte disks :p I could probably backup every single thing I possibly have on 250GB.
My text, schoolwork, downloaded documents, etc would probably fit in that area. In a former life, I was a photo major though, and I'm also mildly obsessed with keeping all of the data.

It's much like the Allie Brosh meme -- CLEAN ALL OF THE THINGS!!

I also have like 220 gigs of music on one of my machines which I need to sort through (and admittedly, toss most of.)

The photos are actually an interesting spectacle. Previously, what i would do was sort them all into 4-gig (approximately) buckets and do all of my viewing/rating/tagging in Adobe Bridge. Then, twice every year (I'm coming up on the time when I would do it, I need to make a decision pretty soon) I would burn all of these folders to new DVDs.

This was both a change management technique, and a data continuity technique, because I don't really trust optical media.

Each time I do it, it takes forever, even though there's almost no work or thought to be done, and I almost always mess up somehow. (usually by mis-labeling a disk or burning the same stuff twice.)

My more recent strategy has been to keep the stuff on one of my laptop's auxiliary disks, and then back that up to a file server VM on my big server, and then back that up to the large external drive. That may or may not get refined in the next few months/years as I start to have more time to think about backup strategies. (Something I don't get to think about nearly as often as I'd like. [:p] ]'>)

 

mac2geezer

Well-known member
Slightly off topic, but I have an APS DAT drive that came with a 9500 several years ago. I've never been able to find drivers for the device, so if anyone has an applicable Sys 9 driver they're willing to share I would be grateful.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
Have you tried using it with a vintage version of Retrospect (which provides drivers for multiple DAT drives). There isn't a DAT driver for the OS if that is what you mean.

 

mac2geezer

Well-known member
Yeah, my copy of Retrospect says it will work with the drive but when I tried it nothing happened. It's been a while though so maybe it's time to play with it some more.

 
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