- Oct 5, 2005
- 26
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Originally posted by: Eli
Would you all shut the fsck up?
The guy is trying to do us a favor by spreading information. If YOU all don't care that your DVD-R's are going to be worthless in a couple of years, then you should just stay out of the thread in the first place. :roll:
Continue, longevityfreak. Your knowledge is welcome here.
Originally posted by: Eli
Would you all shut the fsck up?
The guy is trying to do us a favor by spreading information. If YOU all don't care that your DVD-R's are going to be worthless in a couple of years, then you should just stay out of the thread in the first place. :roll:
Continue, longevityfreak. Your knowledge is welcome here.
Originally posted by: dighn
This really sucks. Many people use DVDs for backing up stuff and if they go bad in a couple of years then it's rather unsettling. It would be very nice if there's some kind of effort to rate them so people can pick out the archive grade stuff instead of searching all over the net for which manufacturer made a particular brand/model/batch combination.
Originally posted by: Eli
Would you all shut the fsck up?
The guy is trying to do us a favor by spreading information. If YOU all don't care that your DVD-R's are going to be worthless in a couple of years, then you should just stay out of the thread in the first place. :roll:
Continue, longevityfreak. Your knowledge is welcome here.
do you live in the rainforest?Originally posted by: longevityfreak
This is a picture of the humidity reading in my room:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v150/...m-exposed-2hrs45mins-050515_010517.jpg
Originally posted by: LordMaul
Longevityfreak:
I work for several local photography studios who use DVD-Rs (and in rare cases, CD-Rs) as the main form of archival backup. This is, of course, only for jobs that are finished and not needed for quick retrieval on the usually-massive server HDD storage setups, but for the DVD-Rs to be useless in a few years would be really quite alarming to a lot of people I work with regardless. I'm only the graphics guy, but if you could give me some good hard facts in the form of your trustworthy sources that I could present to the people responsible for using this media in the interest of improving the possibility that the data will remain accessible for as long as possible, I would be most grateful.
I figured I'd leave this in the thread as a bump for you and because it looks like there are several members here who may find this specific information helpful. Also, the link seems to not be loading for me... I'd do my own research on this (Google, for instance) but it seems you have put a lot of time into this and I thought I'd help justify that for you.
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