Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/11/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Larry, Archival stability (and readability of) media is only 1/2 of the equation (i.e. Doomsday Book). The other, and more knotty, problems is the S/W to interpret all this data. How useful will WordStar files be 20 years from now? There are solutions (keep old S/W & H/W around forever, develop emulators for obsolete H/W so obsolete S/W can run,...) but all of them troublesome and expensive over the long term. A friend and I looked at the problem about 5 years ago and talked to Canada's National Archive. The only solution viable solution is a process of constant transcription of digital files as they age. Unfortunately, it is not a solution a small startup company can offer successfully. Regards, Spencer On Nov 16, 2009, at 9:38, Lawrence Zeitlin wrote: > > All this is OK for historical papers, including an original copy of the > Magna Carta. The big problem is with digital records, data tapes, e-mail > files, contemporary digital photos, etc. The Archives maintains one or more > of each type of digital reading equipment developed since the Jurassic. > Card > punches and readers, 8 and 16 track tape drives, floppy disc drives from 8" > to 2", CD and DVD writers of all descriptions. A constant task is > refreshing > files by placing them on more durable media. Right now the archival media > of > choice is premium gold plated CD platters with a reputed 100 year life > span. > This is much longer than the dye based DVDs or run of the mill CDs that > most > of us use to store data. The experts feel that CD and DVD drives will be > available for the next few decades. After that, who knows? > > Larry Z