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To: Bob Ireland
The Anons focus on archiving. Even most archival grade digital media is impermanent. Archival Discs last about 10 years before they start to have problems. Tapes, drum memory,Disk drives can be demagnetized or damaged.

The digital age produces enormous amounts of information that need to constantly transferred to newer media. I have a pile of zip discs and no zip player and no computer with software to read them. I have diskettes with system and file backups. Is it worth my finding an disk player and a archived system that has software to read them? Do I have anything on there worth saving? Maybe some pictures, but at this point I am not going to pursue them and they are lost. ("Πάντα ῥεῖ" everything flows).

If something is really important, material printed on acid free paper does last, if you can keep insects away. (Think linen or papyrus paper in St Catherine's monastery.) Fired Sumerian clay tablets last! (Yes, he sold 15 sheep for a tun of olive oil and 1 amphora of new wine!)

I suppose if something is really (Really!) important get acid free paper and long lasting ink and print it out. I think that the Library of Congress requires, or possibly recommends that the first print copy of a new book supplied to them be printed on Linen to avoid it disintegrating over time like wood pulp paper.

Color on photographs can fade with time. (Mine have...) make certain you take some black and white family pictures. They will last longer.

Oh well. Time to downsize coming up, when my possesions will join the great river of used and discarded things. Home today. Off to do some errands now.

679 posted on 05/30/2018 9:22:10 AM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission ("of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.")
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To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
***most archival grade digital media is impermanent. Archival Discs last about 10 years before they start to have problems. Tapes, drum memory, Disk drives can be demagnetized or damaged***

The CD was perhaps 4-5 years old; the surface of the CD just 'dissolved'; I recovered some of the data from that part of the disk still viable. Do you know anything of the reliability of thumb drives [other than magnetic corruption]? I have some of my data backed up on a few thumb drives + an SD card.

***I have a pile of zip discs and no zip player and no computer with software to read them***

Yeah... me too... about ten on a disk-stacking frame - good for collecting dust. 🤦 Doh!

***Is it worth my finding an disk player and a archived system that has software to read them? ... ("Πάντα ῥεῖ" everything flows)***

Κράτιστε! in a bit over my head here :^) There is 'the cloud'... I have doubts as to security plus long-term access, but I am a complete plebe.

***If something is really important, material printed on acid free paper does last, if you can keep insects away. (Think linen or papyrus paper in St Catherine's monastery.) Fired Sumerian clay tablets last! (Yes, he sold 15 sheep for a tun of olive oil and 1 amphora of new wine!)***

😺 LOL! I suppose that I could buy a kiln... Ashurbanipal (אָסְנַפַּר) might have one for sale. Unhappily, my cuneiform is terrible!

Also, I may be becoming obsolete... 🌚 eventually...

701 posted on 05/30/2018 11:08:49 AM PDT by Bob Ireland (The Democrat Party is a criminal enterprise)
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