Are they unnecessary at this point? Getting ready to do a new build and wondering if I should put one in.
That is what I suspected when I the copy of Win 11 came on a USB flash drive. Likely don't need it and can't remember the last time I used one. Thanks.Wildmen03 said:
Get a USB one if you really need it.
Writable media can go bad over time. The dye that they use is organic and can degrade, among other things.IslandAg76 said:
I still use CD's for what I call Deep storage. Back good I of photos, financial documents, etc. Then I can dump it off my computer (I have an external hard drive as an intermediate step).
I scan a lot of those type documents. Probably wasting a lot of my time since most everything is available on line and with cloud storage.
TMoney2007 said:Writable media can go bad over time. The dye that they use is organic and can degrade, among other things.IslandAg76 said:
I still use CD's for what I call Deep storage. Back good I of photos, financial documents, etc. Then I can dump it off my computer (I have an external hard drive as an intermediate step).
I scan a lot of those type documents. Probably wasting a lot of my time since most everything is available on line and with cloud storage.
Thanks for the early morning chuckle. Fortunately, my coffee cup was empty at the time.IslandAg76 said:
I am degrading over time too.
I'll probably be useless before the CD's
We have a number of portable and internal hard drives that I need to do this with. I have redundancy in my PC with multiple backup hard drives but should put the portables to better use.Philo B 93 said:
I back up my valuable files (family pics and vids) onto multiple portable hdds then migrate to newer, bigger hdds every 6 or 7 years. My next migration will be to 4 tb ssds.
How do ssds compared to hdds as far as durability and lifespan?
Some time ago I read about some museum that was using DVDs for archival with the expectation that they would last 100 years, but they were doing things that individuals would probably never consider such as very carefully controlled environmental settings in the archives room.TMoney2007 said:Writable media can go bad over time. The dye that they use is organic and can degrade, among other things.IslandAg76 said:
I still use CD's for what I call Deep storage. Back good I of photos, financial documents, etc. Then I can dump it off my computer (I have an external hard drive as an intermediate step).
I scan a lot of those type documents. Probably wasting a lot of my time since most everything is available on line and with cloud storage.
SSD drives are supposed to be far more stable for long term storage than regular had drives.BMo said:We have a number of portable and internal hard drives that I need to do this with. I have redundancy in my PC with multiple backup hard drives but should put the portables to better use.Philo B 93 said:
I back up my valuable files (family pics and vids) onto multiple portable hdds then migrate to newer, bigger hdds every 6 or 7 years. My next migration will be to 4 tb ssds.
How do ssds compared to hdds as far as durability and lifespan?
Quote:
Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway.
I know they can and will go bad eventually, but I have read 20+ year old CD-R's today that are just fine.TMoney2007 said:Writable media can go bad over time. The dye that they use is organic and can degrade, among other things.IslandAg76 said:
I still use CD's for what I call Deep storage. Back good I of photos, financial documents, etc. Then I can dump it off my computer (I have an external hard drive as an intermediate step).
I scan a lot of those type documents. Probably wasting a lot of my time since most everything is available on line and with cloud storage.
I've seen plenty of hard drives that could not be read.C@LAg said:nope.eric76 said:
SSD drives are supposed to be far more stable for long term storage than regular had drives.
your ssd crashes, and there are no physical sectors to reread in the future, unlike physical.
and SSDs are also subject to their own form of data rot if they are not occasionally powered on.
a physical drive is a much better option long-term if you really care about the data.
better yet, have redundancy for critical data.
I'd prefer DVD+R over either CD-R or DVD-R media.LoudestWHOOP! said:I know they can and will go bad eventually, but I have read 20+ year old CD-R's today that are just fine.TMoney2007 said:Writable media can go bad over time. The dye that they use is organic and can degrade, among other things.IslandAg76 said:
I still use CD's for what I call Deep storage. Back good I of photos, financial documents, etc. Then I can dump it off my computer (I have an external hard drive as an intermediate step).
I scan a lot of those type documents. Probably wasting a lot of my time since most everything is available on line and with cloud storage.