For cheap or free
We have some stuff that we're getting rid of 'round the office.
Powermac 7200/90. Oooooh. Big. Beige. Slow. Snap up this baby before anyone else does! Please. Please, take it away.
Mac G3 desktop with monitor. Also big, beige, and slow, but not as much. Need a bridge between your zippy new machine and your floppy disks? This is your man.
APS DAT drive. For all your tape backups!
Intel pro/100+ Adapter. Still in box in cellophane.
HP Laserjet IIP. As far as I know, it works.
Also might have copies of Filemaker Pro and a vintage laptop or two, I'll keep you posted.
Also, purely hypothetically, if you had a huge pile of tape backups that you saw no good reason to keep, how would you destroy them?
Powermac 7200/90. Oooooh. Big. Beige. Slow. Snap up this baby before anyone else does! Please. Please, take it away.
Mac G3 desktop with monitor. Also big, beige, and slow, but not as much. Need a bridge between your zippy new machine and your floppy disks? This is your man.
APS DAT drive. For all your tape backups!
Intel pro/100+ Adapter. Still in box in cellophane.
HP Laserjet IIP. As far as I know, it works.
Also might have copies of Filemaker Pro and a vintage laptop or two, I'll keep you posted.
Also, purely hypothetically, if you had a huge pile of tape backups that you saw no good reason to keep, how would you destroy them?
no subject
Backups: someone's probably going to say "a big magnet". But it takes a surprisingly big magnet (think lifting cars) to accomplish the task with modern tapes. And it can't simply be a big magnet, it has to alternate polarity, aka a "degausser".
Most people run them through industrial shredders that grind them down into itty bitty pieces.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(Anonymous) - 2006-05-08 17:13 (UTC) - Expandno subject
If you're lookoing for creative ideas, I leave that to your devious imagination.
(no subject)
(Anonymous) - 2006-05-08 17:30 (UTC) - Expandno subject
most backup tapes take some considerable magnetic force to wipe them totally clean. shredding / fire is the most secure way to destroy them. of course fire probably causes toxic smoke.
many companies just use a secure trash provider to dispose of thigns like this...
no subject
cheap, tho time-consuming/messy methods:
remove tape from case & seperate from hub; then run tape thru cheap paper shredder.
remove tape from case, then cut with tin snips.
no subject
Failing that, find someone with a big axe and safety goggles. Use axe to ensure that no tape spool remains mounted, and no more than 6 inches of tape remains uncut. Dispose of resulting giant mess as standard office waste.
Definitely do not burn them, and do not assume that your magnet skillz are good enough to degauss them.
no subject
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