Subject: Re: Archival Photography
> But isn't the image in the computer decaying as well? I have noticed
> old files that are PDF have fall out.
Leland,
I haven't had that problem yet (but now I want to start checking), but the
idea of preserving digital data seems to be to make copies of copies before
the medium decays enough that the data becomes corrupted (The Art of
Controlled Decay). Leaving anything on a hard disk is just waiting for a
bigger bust-up than losing a floppy or two. The digital archive folks I
have had workshops with seem to trust the accuracy of digital transfer and
copy more than the lastability of the inner chemistry of CD's. Risks
everywhere when you are dealing with only a plus or a minus to tell the
truth. 50/50. My favourite fridge magnet says "The pessimist has just as
much chance of being right as the optimist. The difference is that the
optimist has more fun."
cp optimistic in bc
PS:
Sorry I sent a blank reply earlier this evening. The computer screwed up
when I started this reply and sent it before I wrote anything.
--
To terminate puerile preservation prattling among pals and the
uncoffee-ed, or to change your settings, go to:
<http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/bullamanka-pinheads.html>