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4mm SGI dat drive

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Boogie]{night

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Jan 5, 2010, 9:15:44 PM1/5/10
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WE had 3 indigo 2 machines years ago. We used these for Alias Studio
Tools. I had several models saved on 4 mm dat tapes. The drive is an
SGI SCSI external drive. I still have the drive and the tapes but we
switched to Windows Workstations years ago. Is there any way that this
drive can be run from Windows? Using XP Pro. My present workstation
does have a SCSI card in it.

Steven Hirsch

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Jan 5, 2010, 9:32:00 PM1/5/10
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What application was used to create the archives?

Boogie]{night

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Jan 5, 2010, 10:26:20 PM1/5/10
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>
> What application was used to create the archives?


We ran IRIX on the SGI machines. I think it was utility that was part
of that. Either that or you could navigate to the drive and save the
file directly there.

Tristram Scott

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Jan 6, 2010, 4:54:40 AM1/6/10
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If you used the gui driven utility to back up to tape it was quite likely
writing using bru rather than tar. I don't know that it was ever ported to
other operating systems.

Best bet would be to either get hold of a working Irix machine, or post
your tapes to someone who has one. Check out www.nekochan.net for some
friendly advice either way.


--
Dr Tristram J. Scott
Energy Consultant

Boogie]{night

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Jan 6, 2010, 8:17:36 AM1/6/10
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Thx for your help. I'm almost certain that it was tar. I will check
out your reference. Also...I bought one of the machines and have it at
home but have never actually used it since bringing it home. I'll try
bringing the drive home to see if I can get it going. I believe I
needed a terminator on the drive (it has two SCSI connections).

>
> Best bet would be to either get hold of a working Irix machine, or post

> your tapes to someone who has one.  Check outwww.nekochan.netfor some

Boogie]{night

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Jan 6, 2010, 8:25:46 AM1/6/10
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On Jan 6, 8:17 am, "Boogie]{night" <don...@comcast.net> wrote:
> Thx for your help. I'm almost certain that it was tar. I will check
> out your reference. Also...I bought one of the machines and have it at
> home but have never actually used it since bringing it home. I'll try
> bringing the drive home to see if I can get it going. I believe I
> needed a terminator on the drive (it has two SCSI connections).
>
> The link that you posted does not work. I googled nekochan and got many hits but nothing to their site is working. Looks like exactly what I need tho.

>
>
>
> > Best bet would be to either get hold of a working Irix machine, or post
> > your tapes to someone who has one.  Check outwww.nekochan.netforsome
> > friendly advice either way.  
>
> > --
> > Dr Tristram J. Scott              
> > Energy Consultant                  - Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Boogie]{night

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Jan 6, 2010, 8:26:56 AM1/6/10
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> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -

Gary Heston

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Jan 6, 2010, 8:13:19 PM1/6/10
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In article <A5Z0n.3199$ED....@newsfe12.ams2>,
Tristram Scott <tristra...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
>Boogie]{night <don...@comcast.net> wrote:

[ ... ]

>> We ran IRIX on the SGI machines. I think it was utility that was part
>> of that. Either that or you could navigate to the drive and save the
>> file directly there.

>If you used the gui driven utility to back up to tape it was quite likely
>writing using bru rather than tar. I don't know that it was ever ported to
>other operating systems.

The Tolis Group produces bru for Windows, Linux, and Solaris, at least.

http://www.tolisgroup.com/

Not sure if this is the same bru, but I'm getting the current version set
up on Fedora with Fedora and Windows clients. (I have a 1.3TB test restore
running at the moment; took 26.5 hours to generate the backup.)

>Best bet would be to either get hold of a working Irix machine, or post
>your tapes to someone who has one. Check out www.nekochan.net for some
>friendly advice either way.

Sounds like the best option; pull them off and ftp the files to Windows.


Gary

--
Gary Heston ghe...@hiwaay.net http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/
"Where large, expensive pieces of exotic woods are converted to valueless,
hard to dispose of sawdust, chips and scraps." Charlie B.s' definition of
woodworking.

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