Sujet : Re: Alternative to Optical Storage????
De : 186283 (at) *nospam* ud0s4.net (186282@ud0s4.net)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.misc alt.folklore.computersDate : 03. Oct 2024, 02:50:01
Autres entêtes
Organisation : wokiesux
Message-ID : <fB-dnVcXsOrXZWD7nZ2dnZfqnPednZ2d@earthlink.com>
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On 10/1/24 11:28 PM, Robert Riches wrote:
On 2024-10-01, 186282@ud0s4.net <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:
...
What DOES last ... baked clay tablets. Still
readable after 8000 years. You can read all
about the hero Gilgamesh, note the accounting
of taxes on wheat in Uruk :-)
... and, according to a discussion I read in some newsgroup,
they're goat-proof, unlike Papyrus. The lengthy discussion
was marvelous!
It's kind of an important subject now - SO much
data, important now, important a few years from
now, some important historically - yet there are
really NO good media to STORE it on. The best ones
are also the lowest-density and/or going obsolete.
So, for now, up-replicate plus "cloud". Note that
Vlad's boyz MIGHT evaporate that cloud at any
time alas ....
The durability of those old baked-clay tablets
though - extraordinary. They provide a broad
window into what's likely the very first civ.
The videotapes of the moon landings - can't be
found. SOME think they were over-written with
new stuff by idiots. Me, I think they're in
a trunk in someone's attic. Thing is, they were
typical mylar 'tape' with a mag coating which
WILL start to flake off, esp if the attic is
in Florida. The plastic isn't forever either.
Finally, most everything to do with the early
space program was proprietary - often very
literally one-off - with no standardized or
even decently-documented formats. Hell, we've
never even really SEEN the moon landing because
there was no way to adapt the proprietary HD
video to anything the media could use - our view
was of the news camera pointed at a long-persistence
B&W console monitor.
Can WE make the better 'clay tablet' ? A fused
silica or aluminum oxide disk or page laser-
pitted somewhere inside (with semi-glyphic
instructions on each) ??? 10,000 years is a
worthy goal.