Good or bad idea?
12/12/2005 10:12:39 AM
pretty good, so far as free storage options go. a dvdr is still better, and will last 2-3 years.
12/12/2005 10:14:21 AM
is that all a DVD will last??
12/12/2005 10:19:34 AM
Yes, DVDR's and CDR's generally only last 2-3 years MAX before massive data corruption sets in.It's a massive fucking scam, the whole "put all your vhs tapes on dvd" industry. PRESSED cd and dvd's CAN last hundreds of years, but NOT burned discs, which is what the whole industry is using.
12/12/2005 10:26:33 AM
i dunno if i believe that. I have burned CD's that I made in the late 90's that still work for me.
12/12/2005 11:15:53 AM
damn this sucksthere's a shitton of archives burnt to cd that my company relies on
12/12/2005 11:37:12 AM
Neon, can you provide legitimate documentation on this, if you are not trolling?
12/12/2005 11:42:58 AM
plenty of burnt cds and dvds last well over 3years
12/12/2005 11:46:50 AM
oh shit, he called him Neon, and he called him a possible trolltime to leave this thread ]
12/12/2005 11:48:13 AM
HERE WE GO
12/12/2005 12:24:43 PM
lol, a scam yeah maybe if you wipe your ass with it daily and scratch off that thin layer of scored plastic that holds the data it'll only last 3 years
12/12/2005 12:30:58 PM
Before long noen is going to post a picture of a checkcall that researchand claim a win
12/12/2005 12:36:33 PM
12/12/2005 1:10:52 PM
Ok, so what is the best way to secure these files I am going to send to google? I assume there is a pgp program that will encrypt files I give it?
12/12/2005 1:22:51 PM
12/12/2005 2:04:33 PM
12/13/2005 1:00:35 PM
i had cable i-net in '98 - what are you talking about
12/13/2005 1:17:12 PM
^^ I can see that happening, but that still is not data corruption on behalf of the burning, or pressing, or data becoming corrupt just because. What you are saying is that what the lamination being burnt, or pressed upon can degrade over time, which can cause the data to become unreadable, most likely caused by an external source of scratching or something of the like - maybe even the laser of a CD reading device could have something to do with this.
12/13/2005 1:24:09 PM
Its happening ALOT. And its not just specific brands or anything. I've started making digital backups of every CD I own simply because eventually all seem to be doing it, regadless of manufacturer, use, or storage. I found a wallet of CDr's I had not opened in a couple years. They were all mp3 CD's from 98/99 and I could only get through one of the CD's copying the data, all the rest were corrupt.
12/13/2005 1:38:10 PM
good thread. its scary, but true. it really bothers me when some of my older CDRs start peeling away somehow (despite being in temperature-controlled environments)... so sad -ZiP!-
12/13/2005 4:11:40 PM
http://www.cdfreaks.com/news/7751I know over the past few years I have seen several big real world trials of CDR media, which have all concluded basically the same thing,it's a crapshoot with good media, as there are always bad batchesand cheap media is pretty much destined to fail quickly.http://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/gipwg/StabilityStudy.pdf is another one good thing to read.Basically if you use quality stuff, rarely use the disc, and store it properly, you have the best chance of longevity.[Edited on December 13, 2005 at 6:12 PM. Reason : .]
12/13/2005 6:06:57 PM
what a downer, and i was just transfering video tapes to dvd.thats cool though cause you can just reburn them every 5 years or so.
12/13/2005 8:46:27 PM