wired article: " digital mediocrity"
31this may be of interest, if a little redundant: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/020816.html
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oxlongm wrote:I saw Amazing Translucent Sealing Shit back in '93 on the second stage at H.O.R.D.E. The solo on Unbreakable Plastic Slab that night was freaking transcendent, man.
zeroart wrote:
if you are saving files in wave or aiff, you are covered for however long digital media can hold up. there is an open C library that reads/writes lots of different file formats and can handle both little-endian and big-endian data. it is called libsndfile.
i'm not sure how the argument of the longevity of digital media even comes into play. it is a magnetic medium just like analogue tape. by all rights a magnetic hard disk should last just as long as analogue tape. we don't know exactly how long, but there are magnetic hard drives that contain data still intact from the late 1950's.
zeroart wrote:i'm not sure how the argument of the longevity of digital media even comes into play. it is a magnetic medium just like analogue tape. by all rights a magnetic hard disk should last just as long as analogue tape. we don't know exactly how long, but there are magnetic hard drives that contain data still intact from the late 1950's.
steve wrote:zeroart wrote:i'm not sure how the argument of the longevity of digital media even comes into play. it is a magnetic medium just like analogue tape. by all rights a magnetic hard disk should last just as long as analogue tape. we don't know exactly how long, but there are magnetic hard drives that contain data still intact from the late 1950's.
The data density of hard disk drives from the 60s (it would have been core memory and paper tape or punch cards in the 50s) was much lower than it is now, so conventional oxide-based media were used. These will last a long time. Current (since about 1980) magnetic data storage is orders of magnitude more dense, is recorded on metal particle- (as opposed to metal oxide) media, and much of it is helical-scan tape. Helical scanning makes the physical flatness of the tape critical, as the data are recorded in diagonal stripes meant to be read sequentially, rather than a linear stream of data. Metal particle tape is unstable and changes physically when it oxidizes. Oxide coatings are already oxidized, and don't change very much over time. Most of that change is in the binder and plastic base, and those changes are not catastrophic. Metal particle media are also subject to this substrate deformation.
These things have compounding effects on data storage: Helical scanning means any small defect will lose data. High density means that any loss will be a lot of data lost. Metal particle coatings and plastic substrates ensure that there will be defects over time.
The only way to preserve digital data is to continuously copy files onto ever newer media and formats, and to translate them so they can be opened by the software of the day. Nobody is doing this.
zeroart wrote:also, iron mountain does the exact same thing for all other digital information by providing media storage and data protection. they come by my place of employment daily to take the drives of data from the nightly backups of my server farm.
zeroart wrote:while a bulk of this information is true, it's all solvable.
my friends at XEPA digital are doing exactly what you say in your last paragraph, steve. also, iron mountain does the exact same thing for all other digital information by providing media storage and data protection. they come by my place of employment daily to take the drives of data from the nightly backups of my server farm.
this debate could continue forever. there is no solid answer. it would seem to me that if you had a master recording on a medium and in a format that you wanted to keep, you would hold onto or keep in possession a device to get to your data. you don't record an album to tape and then get rid of your tape machine.
LVP wrote:If, say, 10% of lions tried to kill gazelles, compared with 10% of savannah animals in general, I think that gazelle would be a lousy racist jerk.
Gone Savage wrote:zeroart wrote:also, iron mountain does the exact same thing for all other digital information by providing media storage and data protection. they come by my place of employment daily to take the drives of data from the nightly backups of my server farm.
All we do is store your drives. Unless you are digitally archiving your stuff (but reading your post it doesn't sound like it) so that means all IM is doing is taking your stuff offsite. One of the things I understood of Steve's post was that no one is continually making new copies of the data on surviving formats. Your drives will be sitting in our warehouse and stay safe (most of the time, I drop stuff sometimes) but it's not being updated on new formats.
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