OK, so I want to work out how big that bandwidth is. let's work it out. lets take a large station wagon, and load it to the gunwalls with 200GB HDDs.
How many will fit inside the car? If we use a bit of padding to separate the drives, we can count on putting around 2000 or so inside a fully loaded wagon. That works out to be 200 GB x 2000 = 400,000,000,000,000 Bytes or 400 Terabytes (TB).
Let's say we need to transfer the data 500 kilometres at an average speed of 90Km/h. That's a travel time of 5.5 hours, or 330 minutes. Let's be pessimistic and say it takes a combined total of 4 minutes to remove a HDD at the start, and install it at the end - and only one guy is doing it. 4 x 200 = 800 minutes.
So we can move 400 terabytes in 1130 minutes (18.8 hours or 67,800 seconds).
400,000,000,000,000 / 67800 = 5,899,705,015 Bytes/second
That's 5.9GB/s or 47,197,640,120 bps.
It's equates to a DVD every second.
I could live with that.
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Conveniently, it's almost exactly 1/3rd of the bandwidth available over the Southern Cross Cable which connects New Zealand to the USA. WHOA.
I wonder how many DVDs you could fit into that same car? Yes, I know, it's full of Hard Drives! We'd take them out first...
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