Pete Turnbull wrote:
On Jul 28, 12:11, Joe R. wrote:
The problem is that AFIK no one has found ANY
CD disks that are
reliable. Several people that have been interviewed in national
publications explictly pointed out that they bought top quality disks
but
they were still unreliable. In fact, it didn't
appear that there was
much
difference between the cheap ones and the
expensive ones.
The other day I came across a table from a report showing the relative
longevity of data on various media (DLT, CD-R, etc) at a variety of
temperatures and humidities. I'll try and find it again and post some
of the results. Some of you might be shocked. For example, a CD-R
with an expected lifetime of something like 25 years (if I'm not
misremembering the highest figure) under ideal conditions has a
lifetime of only several *months* at higher temperatures (upper 20s C,
that would be 80s F) and humidity. DLTs fared much much better.
Hmm, I can easily check this. I have several hundred CD-Rs that are
obsoleted data backups in my garage. In south central Texas, that means
that they've spent 2-5 years in an uncontrolled climate, with 8 months a
year being over 90F in the garage and near constantly at 50-90%
humidity. If your info is correct, they should pretty much all be useless.
Umm, no matter whether those CDs in my garage are still good, I vote
for magtape or acid-free paper for any long-term archival. There's no
comparison and no debate in our company. We use CDR for easy retrieval
in the short term, and tape for the real backups.
Doc