Optical tape is a medium for optical storage generally consisting of a long and narrow strip of plastic onto which patterns can be written and from which the patterns can be read back.
It shares some technologies with cinema film stock and optical discs, but is compatible with neither.
In the 1990s, it was projected[1] that optical tape would be a commonly used, high-capacity, high-speed computer data storage format.
The primary motivation behind developing this technology was the possibility of far greater storage capacities than either magnetic tape or optical discs.
For example, the goal of the LOTS project in 1995 was to "achieve a data-transfer rate of at least 100 megabytes per second (MB/s) to store more than 1 terabyte on the IBM cartridge", as well as an average access time of 10 seconds;[5] at the time, these specifications were significantly superior to its primary competitor, magnetic tape, which only stored about 10–50 gigabytes per cartridge and had a data-transfer rate of about 15 MB/s.