Posted on 03/10/2014 8:54:35 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Sony Corporation and Panasonic today announced that they have formulated "Archival Disc", a new standard for professional-use, next-generation optical discs, with the objective of expanding the market for long-term digital data storage. Optical discs have excellent properties to protect themselves against the environment, such as dust-resistance and water-resistance, and can also withstand changes in temperature and humidity when stored.
(Excerpt) Read more at hardocp.com ...
See my updates.
Looks like a competitive market is occurring.
I’m doing that using hard drives.
It would be really nice to have a simpler solution.
while your statement about your computer’s hard drive is true, so too is one of the lead in comments:
“Optical discs have excellent properties to protect themselves against the environment, such as dust-resistance and water-resistance, and can also withstand changes in temperature and humidity when stored.”
between computer hard drives and optical disks, the term “excellent” in the statement above can be translated as “superior”, which is why digital archivists will be interested in the development
It's obsolete for short-term read/write, but it's superior in almost every way except for sealed spinning disk. For backups, writing critical data to optical disk and securing it in a fire safe or a temperature-controlled warehouse is about the best you can get for private, retrievable storage.
I've personally started writing encrypted backups to the Amazon cloud (Glacier), and it's insanely convenient; however, if they ever crack 2048-bit RSA encryption, my backups are as good as hacked. The BD-RWs I have in my fire safe, however, are not going anywhere and will survive the harshest fires.
Optical is definitely falling out of use, but it still has its place.
If you really want to keep them dry, I suggest a desiccant material be put in the baggie also. Mainly an issue if you lose electrical power.
Isn’t excessive dryness potentially damaging? Static electricity or some such?
USB has been around long enough that even if it gets replaced there will be readily available adapter units (plug one end into the new type of port, plug a USB cord into the other). At that point, it’ll be time to copy all important files onto the new standard media.
Aye...therein lies the rub.
And I used to think I was the cat’s meow when I installed my 120Mb 3.5” Super Disk drive...10 years ago.
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