- "Don't try to frighten us with your sorcerer's ways, Lord Vader. Your sad devotion to that ancient religion has not helped you conjure up the stolen data-tapes, or given you clairvoyance enough to find the Rebels' hidden fort—"
- ―Conan Antonio Motti, to Darth Vader
Data-tape,[2] also spelled as datatape,[3] or data tape,[4] was a type of physical storage media for different kinds of data. The tape itself, a continuous narrow, flexible strip, was stored on reels inside a protective shell. Monomolecular-switching binary tapes like the ones used by the Galactic Empire on Scarif had a 512-million-exanode capacity.[5]
History[]
The secret plans for the Galactic Empire's powerful planet-destroying Death Star weapon were stored on data-tapes. These tapes were stolen and later downloaded into a datacard by members of the Rebel Alliance and spirited to Princess Leia Organa, who copied the data from them into the memory banks of the droid R2-D2 in order to deliver them to Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi on Tatooine.[1]
Behind the scenes[]
The plans for the Death Star were described as being recorded on data-tapes in the novelization of the original Star Wars film, released in 1976 before the release of the actual film, A New Hope, known at the time only as Star Wars. At the time, tapes were a modern means of storing information, though for data storage they later became largely obsolete.
Appearances[]
Sources[]
- Star Wars: Ships of the Galaxy
- Rey's Survival Guide
- Star Wars: Rogue One: The Ultimate Visual Guide
- Star Wars: On the Front Lines
- Star Wars Helmet Collection 56 (Highlights of the Saga: Infiltrating the Citadel)
- Rise of the Separatists
- Rebel Starfighters Owners' Workshop Manual
- Star Wars: The Vintage Collection (Pack: Darth Vader) (backup link)
- Star Wars: Battles that Changed the Galaxy
- Star Wars 100 Objects
- Star Wars: Timelines