Archive Corporation
Archive Corporation was a computer tape drive manufacturer, based in Costa Mesa, California, that was acquired by Conner Peripherals in 1993. HistoryThe company was founded in 1980 and based out of Costa Mesa, California.[1] The company employed 3,367 in 1990 and reached revenues of US$293 million in that year, up from $79 million in 1986.[2] Of particular note are the Archive DDS tape drives produced for Silicon Graphics that could also read and write Digital Audio Tapes: the Archive Python 4320 and the Archive Peregrine 4326 (rebranded under Conner or Seagate).[3] Prior to this, Archive was a leading vendor of the very popular quarter-inch cartridge (QIC) format which was a popular distribution format for Unix workstations and servers. For example, software for the Sun-3 (running the Motorola 68K family) and the Sun-4 (based on SPARC processors) was most commonly distributed on QIC media before CD-ROMs became more cost-effective. Archive was better known for their QIC drives.[4] Conner Peripherals acquired Archive in 1993.[5] AcquisitionsIn 1989, Archive acquired Maynard Electronics.[6] The MaynStream brand of tape drives and software was maintained.[7] In March 1990, Archive acquired Cipher Data Products for $120 million.[8] This included Cipher's subsidiary Irwin Magnetic Systems.[9] References
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