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Mailing Disks is Faster than Uploading Data

CowboyRobot writes "Who would ever, in this time of the greatest interconnectivity in human history, go back to shipping bytes around via snail mail as a preferred means of data transfer? Jim Gray would do it, that's who. And we're not just talking about Zip disks, no sir. We're talking about shipping entire hard drives, or even complete computer systems, packed full of disks. David Patterson (one of the developers of both RISC and RAID) interviews ACM Turing Award winner Jim Gray." Back in school we always had a saying, "Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with backup tapes." Seems like that still holds true.

21 of 581 comments (clear)

  1. Netflix by geekee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Netflix has made a business out of shipping data via snail mail, since the bandwidth isn't really there yet to do it over the internet.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
    1. Re:Netflix by G27+Radio · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think it's more a matter of them not wanting to get sued into oblivion by the MPAA. With broadband and DivX, downloading the movies is relatively fast and easy. They'd make a killing if they were able to make movies cheaply available online.

  2. Well, depends on what way you look at it. by gotr00t · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Though it is true that a box filled with hard disks that is snail mailed has a higher rate of transfer than actually uploading the contents of all those hard disks, there are problems with this argument as well.

    First of all, when downloading, you have the benefit of instantly recieving the file that you need, as opposed to waiting at least a day for your shipment to arrive.

    Secondly, remember that bandwidth is probably cheaper than postage. Shipping a carton with a few hard disks and proper insulation would cost at least $30 to overnight it.

    Really, the title of the article comes upon the conclusion way too quickily. You must consider much bandwidth the sender and the reciever have. If both have a several gigabit OC line, then perhaps uploading it would be faster.

    1. Re:Well, depends on what way you look at it. by tarius8105 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      First of all, when downloading, you have the benefit of instantly recieving the file that you need, as opposed to waiting at least a day for your shipment to arrive.

      The average home user still uses a 56k modem, I dont see how it would be faster to transfer a gig on a 56k then priority overnight (much less then 160 gigs).

      Secondly, remember that bandwidth is probably cheaper than postage. Shipping a carton with a few hard disks and proper insulation would cost at least $30 to overnight it.

      Depends on how you ship and what you ship and the connection the person has.

      Really, the title of the article comes upon the conclusion way too quickily. You must consider much bandwidth the sender and the reciever have. If both have a several gigabit OC line, then perhaps uploading it would be faster.

      Not all companies can afford an OC line thus shipping would be cheaper.

  3. I don't know by desenz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The figures, but does the cost of the bandwidth exceed the price of gas?

    Eh. Guess it doesn't matter anyway. Its still cooler to be seen driving down the street w/ lots of tapes.

  4. ArsDigita University by jrothlis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is how ArsDigita University distributes its course material: http://aduni.org/drives/

  5. Attribution for "that saying". by muonzoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    CowboyNeal writes:
    Back in school we always had a saying, "Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with backup tapes." Seems like that still holds true.


    That `saying' is from Andrew S. Tannenbaum's notoriously well written textbook titled simply: "Computer Networks".

    It was certainly in the 2nd edition, the one I used, and might have even been in the 1st edition. I is still in the latest edition. (One of the young-uns in the office has the 4th edition on his shelf.)

    A famous line if ever there was one in the geek world, although perhaps not as humourous as Chairman Bill's:
    "640K ought to be enough for anyone [ paraphrased ]".
  6. Reminds me of the old times of Amiga demoscene by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...when the modems were scarce and phone bills high. Every more or less respectable demoscene group had a member whose function was listed as "swapper".

    Swappers would get in contact with swappers from other groups, and exchange floppies full of newest stuff, productions, news, and everything of any interest (plus some exotic stuff other than floppies - a chicken bone, The Party membership ID, misprinted train tickets, and whatever interesting that caught the eye and filled the envelope up to (but not above) another price-weight treshold.)

    One of the most specific swapper activities was "faking stamps". With 80 and more contacts, at least one letter a month exchanged with each of them, you had to cut on stamp prices, so you smeared the stamp with water-washable glue and wrote in the letter "stamps back", so your contact ripped your stamps off the envelope and sent you in his reply letter together with floppies. Then some washing and stamps could be reused - one set of stamps could go the same way 5-6 times before they needed to be replaced because they started looking suspect. And if it was found - you never put return address on the envelope and nobody in the post office could ever read an Amiga floppy :)

    Another practice was making the floppies sent pretty. You almost never sent back the same floppies - they were in constant flow. Adding a marker signature was the default. Often some sticker or a drawing was common. But there were true masterpieces: A floppy painted gold, with the metal part (and under it) painted silver, the metal part without the spring but removable and attached with a thin chain to the write-protect hole, so you removed it before inserting and it was hanging from your floppy drive while the floppy was inside.

    And finally all the "disk hunt" methods. Famous swappers were rarely replying to newbies who were asking for contact - you had to gain some fame on the scene with your group's productions - or get a recommendation from another swapper. So - the unanswered letters were a good supply of floppies. Sometimes they would even put an ad in some zine (spread by swapp of course ;) which said a girl wants to swap, everyone welcome etc. This was bringing a good deal of free floppies, often with some quite funny stuff on them.

    Well, Internet was what put end to it. Plus average data size - sending 6-8 floppies in one letter wasn't cheap or easy anymore, and with A1200 getting more common, high-level languages, multi-disk demos and mpeg movies, it became necessity...

    Nowadays still throwing a CD across a computer lab is way faster than transferring the data over the net :)

    --
    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  7. Re:SneakerNet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I used to work at an IBM site that was used for offsite back-up by major companies. They have these really cool 38 ton trucks that come into the loading bays, where they just connect up a couple of cables and pump the data off the trucks and into the building.

    Basicly they shunt data around, the same way Exxon et al move oil.

  8. Ram becomes Disks and Disks become tape... by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you RTA, it sounds like based on current advances, in 10 years we'll be at the point where disks are so large 920 TB each) that access will have to become sequential (making them like tape today, access speeds not increasing as fast).

    That would leave room for RAM to essentially become used for random access in the way the disks are used today and perhaps current cache on the CPU to be used more like RAM is today?

    A lot of wire-speed net devices are starting to look like this, with their info stored in a non-volatile storage device, but loaded into RAM on startup and all "work" done in ram.

    It's easy to image a whole chain reaction of purposes for devices slipping into other functions as a result of varying levels of technological advancement in them.

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
  9. Best quote from the interview? by ralphclark · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The academic world has had a common operating system that everybody can talk about and experiment with... It has the downside of creating a mob culture.
    Hey, he can't talk about us like that, can he?
  10. Usenet used to work this way .... by taniwha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    uucp to Australia used to be done by uploading a spool dir somewhere in the US to a tape and airfraighting it to Oz, then doing the same at the other end. You'd post something to usenet and get a reply 2 weeks later

  11. Kitchen Storage by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Each disk was the size of a washing machine and cost around $20,000.
    An interesting gap in Gray's memory. He's not describing the disk, he's describing the drive. In 1970, all storage was removable. A free-standing IBM drive was not only the size of a washing machine, it looked like one, because the top opened up to insert or remove a disk pack. There were other multi-drive consoles that resembled pizza ovens.
  12. Storage and usage.... by Cplus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the major thoughts in the whole interview is that our storage has increased to such a point that we can't access it all in a reasonable fashion. For my uses (which are far from industrial level) I find that I can only watch one movie or listen to one song at a time. On my 200 gigs of hard disk I've got 60 gigs of music (and growing daily) and at least 100 gigs of movies.

    Don't judge me on the legalities of the situation, but note that this isn't uncommon...I have some very drastic media needs and the media that I like is pretty intensive, but I don't very often need to stream any of it en masse to another location. It suits it's purposes fine exactly where it is, and I haven't had any problem acquiring any of it or accessing it.

    I suppose my rambled-to point is that for my needs I'd rather there was more storage at this point than have higher access speeds as I can get all that I need as fast as I need it. Perhaps our usage of the medium dictates how it develops.

    --
    "Share your knowledge. It's a way to achieve immortality." -- Dalai Lama
  13. Re:Tapes too... by CptChipJew · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Work units are ~300 kilobytes a piece, or at least thats how much the client downloads.

    --
    Vonal Declosion
  14. My experience by Dok+Fenderson · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I just recently moved halfway across the US from my hometown. A buddy of mine who had a ton of MP3s (mostly legal BTW) had just suffered a HDD crash and his SO's car had been broken into meaning that TONS of music had been lost/toasted. Before I left, I'd copied his whole collection to my drive. Shipping him a drive with the whole contents (60 GB) of my music collection took a hell of a lot less time than letting him download it (at 20 Kb per second (Ghod I hate SBC!)) or worse yet, take the time to pick through it at human speeds, and was far cheaper unless you figure that the cost incured by me sending it overnight was in addition to my regular bills.

    Dok

    --
    "You can't screw the system, but you can give it a good fondling." -- Too lazy to look it up
  15. Datacom 101 by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This reminds me of a question on a 1980s data comms paper.

    Q:A man with a delivery bike can pedal at 20mph between the organisations two offices that are 5 miles apart. The basket on the bike can carry five half-inch tape reels. What is the effective throughput of this datalink? For extra credits: A modem can transfer data at 300bps. At what distance does this outperform person with bike.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  16. Shipping Laptops by zymurgyboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I work in a AmLaw top 100 law firm in DC. We do a lot of complex litigation work. We use software such as Concordance, Ringtail, and Litgator's Notebook (runs on Lotus Notes) to manage collections of documents. The documents are scanned to group IV tiff; the meta data and OCR text that is extracted from the documents at scan time is loaded into another database that overlays the images.

    These tiff file collections run into the millions.

    Of course the point of doing this is to facilitate collaboration on document review between us, our clients and our co-counsel. These people are often 1000s of miles apart, and nearly as often have crap for IT resources (equipment and personnel).

    There are ways of accessing this stuff over the internet securely but it's never quite the same as having the real version of the software. This form of access often proves to be impractical for the lawyers who travel alot depending on the type of access they can get wherever they end up.

    So what often happens is, we end up dumping the entire collection on a laptop with a big hard drive or a bigger firewire or USB drive, so they can work without access to the internet and then replicate changes when they can get the laptop back on ethernet or a POTS line.

    Collections of images and databases (not to mention the various Power Point presentations and word processing files) can very easily run over 50GB. Moving this across the LAN, over my PC BUS to another hard drive and then FEDEXing it is certainly faster than doing the same transfer using FTP or SCP. Not to mention, that way I can install the software (properly) and test the whole setup before I send it off. The extra wear and tear I save on my psyche from NOT having to explain how to install all of the software, point it to the image collections, and deal with equipment I have no control over while being screamed at by extreme Type A attorneys going to trial makes that laptop look like a pretty good investment.

    These are good if you have someone on the other end of your FEDEX run who know how to open the case on a PC and install a HD themselves. I can setup one machine with everything, image the hard drive, make copies on other drives and drop them into FEDEX pouches as fast as I can make 'em. I can't think of a faster way to move a few 100 GBs of stuff to a half dozen places inside of a day. If someone has ideas, I'm all ears.

    --
    If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
  17. Re:The telecom industry is to blame. by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well there is a Pattern That goes along comparing Desktop Performance and information needed v. download bandwith.

    First during the mainframe era a serial connection was fast enough to operate a dumb terminal hooked to a large expensive mainframe because the information that needed to send was small and processors were expensive.

    Bandwith Wins.

    Then the PC era came about where software starts to become more graphically intensive and needing more direct access to the CPU power which is becoming cheaper.

    CPU Wins.

    Internet Era, when people are getting use to using the internet using now using graphics and bandwith have improved to send the graphics at a resonable speed.

    Bandwith Wins.

    Today. We have been collecting a lot of data and storage is cheap we are use to having a lot of data on hand. Data now is becoming more multimedia based thus taking a lot more space then a text file.

    CPU Wins.

    Possible Future. After echomony picks up and improvements in PDAs and a wide spread of wireless internet ether via WiFi or Cell. The PC will become more pointless in todays life. Servers will be providing the data for the PDA and intercommunicating with other PDAs.

    Bandwith Wins.

    And continues.

    It is not a real circle and these times overlap but there is change in focus of desktop computing to client server.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  18. 1000 20-terabyte drives by zymurgyboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Favorite quote from the article: "Not many of us know what to do with 1,000 20-terabyte drives--yet, that is what we have to design for in the next five to ten years."

    Heh. I do, so get designing. The various law firms reviewing documents from cases like Enron (criminal , bankruptcy, and civil procedings), Microsoft's antitrust suit, the SCO v. IBM, etc. etc. need that space to store all the materials from their case work. Lots of paper from all those places get turned into electronic images managed by very large custom databases.

    Guess how many Group IV tiffs and pdfs some of these become. Answer: millions. In five or ten years, cases such as these will likely consist of collections of data that large. Terabytes of data for cases such as these are not uncommon now. Enron could get this big by itself by then. It's well on its way to becomming one of the largest cases of all time. Check this out. Whoa.

    --
    If you never make mistakes, it's probably because you're not doing anything.
  19. Re:Tapes too... by ADOT+Troll · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am a mainframe console operator at a large computer datacenter, with several state government agencies outsourcing their mainframe processing to our center. We have every day, UPS and Fedex shipments of 3480- and 3490-format tapes (look like 8-track audio tapes) to load into the mainframe, even some old arse 3420 tapes (the big magnetic reel tapes)

    some of the files on these tapes are litereally only a few kilobytes large.. (omfg wtf lol!)

    certainly is NOT faster than ftp'ing the data over, considering the agencies main offices have dedicated T1's and T3's going into the mainframes. but due to the beaurocracy, and fear of changing ANYTHING mindset these agencies have, they still mail these tapes back and forth

    granted, some of the sites have started mailing floppy disks or burned cd's instead (laugh)