Tape is a good backup medium. Where DVD does better is for archiving files for random access. If you back up a 4GB of data on tape and need a file from the last half of that tape, you have to scan through the tape until you get to the file. Off the DVD (HD DVD / BR), its accessible like a hard drive and quickly files the necessary files.
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Yep, random access and yes, it's a tradeout. However modern tapes are much-much faster.
I've used tapes for many many years. I've found that in the long term, tapes are not near as reliable as I've had with CD / DVD etc. Way too many times have I gone back to a backup two of three years and have not been able to read it anymore.
=I stronly disagree. Look, we use LTO tapes by the hundreds for years now and not one has failed yet. DLTs however were more sensitive to heat, I agree but heat kills DVDs even faster. Nevertheless we had dozens of CDs and DVDs dead, even brand name mediums, out of the same sized lot (ie hundreds).
You might want to check out Exabytes VXA: they claim they've boiled, frozen, dropped, even dropped into hot coffe and yet restored 100% data:
http://exabyte.com/technology/tested/index.cfm
I would also point out that most tape drives I've seen always over state their read write rates.
I think you're confusing the compressed vs native speed issue here...
Even thought it say you can write at 20MB/sec, if the disk is limited to reading of only 10MB/sec, then you'll get 10MB or less on the writing to tape.
There's no disk like 10MB/s for long years now.
Average IDE or SATA disks can read at least around 40-50MB/s anytime.
OTOH top tape systems like an LTO-3 can be faster than your average disk but those are designed for SCSI or more likely striped or other RAID volumes.