This is a great time to back up your data and replace old storage media.

My checklist for this week:

- Download all cloud data to local copies

- Backup phone data to PC

- Run BD-R backups - Only use HTL discs!
blu-raydisc.info/licensee-list
I use these:
amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B008F5M2OY

(Put sensitive data in VeraCrypt archives first)

- Format and test old flash media

- Macrium Reflect system images; export to external media

- Replace oldest HDD with a SSD:
amazon.com/dp/B07SNHB4RC

@mcfate
Solid choice. Pioneer make excellent disc drives.

The most important thing is to use quality HTL media from the above list. Fewer companies make them nowadays. LTH discs are cheaper to manufacture, but perform far worse in long-term reliability tests. You can't even trust all the the old top brands like Taiyo Yuden who have since moved to the cheaper processing plants in China.

@voltronic

Luckily, most of the content is actually pretty static, so if I get it onto optical discs, I can kind of stop worrying about the rotating media it was on.

@mcfate
Yes, but I'm saying you should also care about the long-term stability of the optical media, and there's quite a bit of variance there.

I'm happy to say I have CD-R backups over 20 years old that still read perfectly.

The main reason I promote optical backups is they are much more likely to work in some future system years from now than will a hard drive, which might have an obsolete interface by then, and is much more sensitive to shock and environmental factors.

@voltronic @mcfate Many years ago, in the 1990s, I read an article in Scientific American about the problems of long-term data storage. Long-term, as in archaeological units of time. Issues include: (1) media preservation, (2) hardware to read the media, and (3) software to decode the bits. The author recommended updating data to newer media over time to intentionally preserve it. At the time, he estimated 10 reliable years for CDs. They're lasting longer than 10 years, we now know.

@mcfate @paxterrarum @voltronic

Etched in microfiche on titanium ribbon is really the only way to go for serious long-term storage.

All you need to read it is optics.

Those will never change. 😐

@mcfate @paxterrarum @voltronic

I'm a fan of Brian Eno: don't try to recreate your old data, create new, better data.

@paxterrarum @mcfate @voltronic

FTR, my first novel in digital form is stored on 8-inch hard sectored floppy disks that I still have kicking around here somewhere. There's no way in hell I can recover that.

Luckily I also have paper copies, and scanned one in using OCR.

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