Well, I'm currently building a new computer, and suddenly this DDS thing is sounding appealing to me again. I just came into a project where I will have many more DAT tapes to transfer than I ever imagined, so possibility of transferring faster than real time is a consideration again.
I'm just not very knowledgeable about this kind of thing. I remember in one of the last posts on DAT Heads (I think it's dead now?) someone was starting a Yahoo group regarding DDS drives with the possibility of someone writing a modern GUI program for audio transfers, but I'm not sure what became of that. I tried searching recently, but didn't find much.
Anyway, I know my computer will have at least one SCSI connection, so I'm thinking of starting with an old standard like this:
http://shopper.cnet.com/tape/sony-dds-sdt-9000/4014-3204_9-30029017.html(I've heard that anything after DD3 does not support audio, by the way.)
I've also thought about mounting the drive externally, but that would involve some adapter cables to make it connect to USB or SATA. However, I'd assume that would also require some kind of male-female adapter - and I'm not sure how this kind of external drive would be powered...
Despit all this, it will all come down to what program to use. I know about DAT2WAV, but I've never had much luck with command line stuff.
I did find this, which seems truly ancient, but I wonder if can still work under newer versions of Windows, perhaps in one of Windows 7's compatibility modes?
http://www.datman.comhttp://www.brothersoft.com/datman-99-3188.htmlLooks real slick, but I can't help but be skeptical about its current compatibility.
Anyway, as you can see I'm kinda lost here... Could anyone tell me exactly what they are doing today to make successful DDS audio transfers, or at least point me to a guide that isn't 15 years old?

H²O outlined his method pretty well - just wondering what other possibilities there may be and if there are any additional details I should know.
Thanks!
P.S. I would first be trying this on Windows 7 Ultimate where you can download a built-in XP3 mode, or if none of that works I would resort back using "real" original "XP Pro.