Sujet : Re: Alternative to Optical Storage????
De : 186283 (at) *nospam* ud0s4.net (186282@ud0s4.net)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.advocacy comp.os.linux.miscDate : 04. Oct 2024, 05:35:37
Autres entêtes
Organisation : wokiesux
Message-ID : <K_idnZ52ZLAH7WL7nZ2dnZfqn_SdnZ2d@earthlink.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
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On 10/3/24 3:13 PM, Nux Vomica wrote:
On Thu, 3 Oct 2024 01:47:00 -0400, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote:
>
It's a SERIOUS PROBLEM. We make SO much data now,
SUCH volume, and at least SOME of it IS important
for both legal and historical reasons - yet there
are NO really good archival media.
>
Very well stated. This was, of course, the real subject
of my original post.
I would guess that human beings (a.k.a. Homo sapiens) are
not very far sighted. We witness this in societal reactions
to COVID-19 and global warming. It seems that human
civilization is not capable at all of being proactive.
>
Optical disks - esp M-Disks - can LAST ... but they
are LOW-DENSITY by today's defs by a BIG margin.
It's also not clear if you'd be able to FIND a
DVD reader device 25 years from now. Even most
current PCs/laptops don't COME with those anymore.
>
BDR optical disks have enough capacity to easily deal with
business, government, or personal documents.
It is only when we consider multimedia files, especially
videos, that we run into problems.
Good luck finding a BDR reader device/drivers even
25 years from now.
At my last job, they had about 10tb of stuff going back
like forever - and SOME of it was of legal/historical
significance but you'd never know exactly WHAT, so
you had to keep it ALL alive. Other biz that might
be 100tb easy.
I remember ONE govt agency once demanded docs going
back to the *1920s* ... fortunately they had THAT,
albeit on old yellowed paper. Musta pissed-off the
feds when they actually delivered that ... 'cause
then they had to PAY OUT :-)
>
The Library Of Congress and Smithsonian are FREAKIN'
at this point. SO much historical data - but they
can't even find the hardware/drivers to READ the
often-proprietary media.
>
This is another story that needs to be covered. How will
these and other institutions solve the problem and how can
any solutions be extended to personal computing?
But since consumer-grade computing is dominated by fashion
and fad, it's not likely that the grubbing corps will produce
long-term storage technology.
No, they won't. A FEW make adapters, but for HOW
long ... and the drivers for whatever OS won't
work forever.
I have some 8-inch floppies - but NO way to read
them anymore. Maybe SOME converter biz, but at
what PRICE ? Even then 8-inch floppies were NOT
all formatted the same at any level. Every maker
tended to use their OWN "better" way.
The govt/NASA stuff - even WORSE situation. Esp
for NASA literal one-off devices/formats were made.
For mag/optical ... in THEORY you can probe them
micron by micron with mag/laser probes and then
eventually figure out the format. Again $$$ !!!
So, it's back to baked clay tablets ..... 10k
years and still readable .......