Eric Smith and Tony Duell wrote:
Why not?
Which parts would degrade? I think most modern systems have
Just about all of them :-(
A lot of hard drives store HDA parameters (bad blocks, servo settings,
etc) in an E2PROM on the logic board. It's programmed for that particular
HDA. SO I think that will be long-gone. Ditto other bits of silicon will fail
Obviously, modern technology (since roughly 1975, as far as computers are
concerned) was not made to last 100 years or even 10.
The motor and positioner bearings will probably stick.
Sure you _can_
dismantle the HDA in a clean room and re-lubricate, but re-aligning the
drive will not be trivial
Perhaps the only alternative would be to put _dis_assembled parts in the
time capsule, and leave detailed directions for assembly. A statement like
"These are the best directions we could find. Note that the 1979 computer
is a lot easier to work with. Note how technology has changed in 20 years."
would be an effective (if not encouraging) comment for the people in 2100!
I wonder if the hard drive and motherboard manufacturers would have any
sympathy for people who are making time capsules and give out their
proprietary information? Probably not but it's worth a shot. :)
-- Derek