From: Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:smb@research.att.com] Sent: Thursday, December 14, 2000 1:14 PM
Never under-estimate the bandwidth of a mini-van filled with DLT tapes, on the freeway at 65 mph. - updated to current - rmeyer - original author unknown
Andy Tanenbaum, "Computer Networks", if I remember correctly.
*Much* older -- I first heard it in 1969, and I don't think it was orginal then...
I know for certain that it dates back to the pain-frame daze and originally refered to 9600 baud open-reel tape. It was a true anacdote involving a chevy impala stationwagon and they needed to get a massive amount of IBM 360 data, from somewhere in Los Angeles to Sacramento. One of the alternatives was unreliable 300 baud links (1200 baud wouldn't work for some reason). They chose to use the chevy, they beat the time by days. I was an MTS-III, at /HAC/C&DP/LB (pre-GM), when I heard it the first time. I am amazed that, that far back (20 years), I remember that much detail. The context I heard it in was that we had a similar problem getting some data from behind the "cactus curtain", in Tuscon, AZ. If you want to transfer a multi-TB database, a short distance, it still holds true.