On Tuesday, October 10, 2006 09:37:03 AM -0700 ted creedon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If industry did a better job of archiving and placing old software in the public domain, there would be very few software patents issued..
Well, that was a nice little rant, but I fail to see what relevance it had to the question, which was:
What kind of dipstick would wait 5-10 years after their backup solution end-of-lifed to worry about this?
I have AFS backup tapes going back 19 years, mostly in off-site storage somewhere. Some people may have the luxury of being able to look at the contents of all of their backups and predict which ones are "important" enough to spend time copying to new media, but most of us do not. That's why we maintain the capability to read old backups.
-- Jeffrey T. Hutzelman (N3NHS) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sr. Research Systems Programmer School of Computer Science - Research Computing Facility Carnegie Mellon University - Pittsburgh, PA _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list OpenAFS-info@openafs.org https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info