Forumite Members › General Topics › Tech › PC Talk › Archival Storage
- This topic has 4 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 3 years, 5 months ago by
Dave Rice.
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October 7, 2022 at 12:21 pm #70079
Dredging up a topic from the past, some old MM posters were worried about archival storage of precious genealogical information. At that time the consensus was the best solution was to stick the information/photo onto acid-free paper and use metal dyes for the ink. However as most people wanted to keep lots of family photos this was not a favoured option, and CD storage became the favoured medium of the day.
While Cloud storage MAY now have a place, it is hard to know if it drops into the archival category given Bitrot/commercial etc problems. So assuming the archival problem of reading CDs can be solved, they still look good, and it was then thought that Bluray may even be better.
The Canadian Government have had their own concerns and have investigated CD/DVD/BD disk storage. Surprisingly their study, shows BD disks to be a fairly carp medium ranking with DVD R/W. The gold old ‘Gold’ CDs or DVDs are far superior.
It seems the Canadian Government completely forgot any difficulties in reading the disks. Just twenty years on our own Government had huge problems in trying to find readers for the large laser disks used for the Millenium Doomsday archive!
Modern technology obviously has made life a lot easier, but I believe that a vanishingly few family photos that are taken today will survive until 2250. Conversely surviving photos of Victorian ancestors are still a moderately common occurrence today.
If you are interested in the topic I suggest research using the term ‘archival printing’, from my quick look, a laser printer on acid free paper is best for black & white, while an ink jet looks best for colour. link
Interestingly, some Kodak discussions suggest that using colour separation on an image and storing the separate colours as individual black and white images may be the best way to store and preserve colour images.
October 10, 2022 at 4:03 pm #70092Didn’t kodak actually have there own nuclear reactor, back in the day when they turned over silly money?
Topaz GigapixelAI is great for sorting out your early digital snaps and for me that was with a kodak.
Get the free trial, but it dont last long.
October 10, 2022 at 8:15 pm #70093Lots of US companies had a small fission reactor in their research labs. The one I saw was immersed in a ‘swimming pool’ of water which resulted in a very pretty blue glow all around the reactor, due to the Cherenkov radiation as charged particles slowed down in the water.
IIRC one of the early Bond movies showed a nuclear reactor and this blue light.
October 11, 2022 at 1:55 pm #70094IIRC one of the early Bond movies showed a nuclear reactor and this blue light.
The first Bond movie (Dr No), as the antagonist ends up getting boiled in the cooling pool at the end of the film.
😉
"Everything looks interesting until you do it. Then you find it’s just another job" - Terry Pratchett
October 12, 2022 at 9:47 am #70101As mentioned in anther post, the Btrfs disk format guards against bit rot by being self healing. The easiest way to implement an archive using this is with a Synology +series NAS where it’s now the default.
The bundled Photo app is a pretty good Google Photos equivalent and supports facial recognition and geolocation awareness “find all photos of Aunty Jane in Paris in 2018”. The + series all have desktop class CPUs that make processing this sort of data easier. All Intel until this year, embedded Ryzen “V” are now found in the latest models.
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