List,

I apologize in advance for my long posting

Several weeks ago I posted what were my attempts to save data and my school-of 
hard-knocks learning curve.  Unfortunately several posters just had to nit-pick 
the process I had used and started a long series of posts and counter-posts 
about the process while totally missing the message.  So I’m going to walk 
through this again hopefully for the edification of the majority.

Just several days ago a 10 year old Canadian girl discovered a super-nova while 
studying photographic images.  Observations by the world’s two most powerful 
earth based telescopes confirmed here discovery. 

Now consider the case of the Antikythera mechanism.  It was close to 2,000 
years ahead of what was eventually developed in Europe.  Most likely we never 
knew about it was that the library in Alexandria Egypt was joyfully burned 
three times by religious idiots [see Wikipedia].

This mechanism was so complicated and accurate that as least passing knowledge, 
if not some or all of its drawings, would have been there.  In context to the 
science of that time, it ranked up with what the Hubble telescope accomplished 
for science today.

Which brings us here to today.

Governments and private businesses are storing millions of tons of written 
documents in the evacuated chambers of salt mines of the world [see Wikipedia]. 
 This does beg the question of where the inventory lists are stored.  The 
reason for this is that no other archival grade of mass storage really exists.  
The last method that I’m aware of is black & white polyester microfilm which is 
rated at 500 years.  With the almost total transition to digital cameras, there 
is no financial incentive to produce the necessary film stock to continue that 
process.

NASA has lost large amounts of acquired data as no equipment now exists to read 
the information.

Current CD/ DVD media is no solution.  A 2004 report published in the Journal 
of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology entitled 
"Stability Comparison of Recordable Optical Discs-A Study of Error Rates in 
Harsh Conditions."  You can read it yourself at 
http://nvl-p.nist.gov/pub/nistpubs/jres/109/5/j95sla.pdf.

Until someone invents a stabilized glass DVD and perhaps a holographic laser 
beam to create the needed pits W/O chemicals (embedded gold maybe?) archival 
data storage W/O paper is a crap-shoot. 

So where am I going with all this?  Glad you asked.

No one knows if their or others data will lead to a new discovery or process.  
Da Vinci certainly didn’t.  It can however; lead to learning that can then can 
be taken to the next level of knowledge and invention.

Words cannot express my gratefulness to those who have taken the considerable 
effort and expense to post science information and support technical lists such 
as this on the net as well as the posters who have kindly shared their 
knowledge with us.

I just hope it doesn’t get lost.

End of Rant.  I now get off my soapbox and return you to your normal 
programming. 

Regards,

Perrier  




      

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