Guide to Digital Preservation from NIST
Little Hamster writes "The scientists working on the Digital Preservation Program at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has released an excellent 50 page guide on care and handling of CDs and DVDs for long term storage. It talks about the effects of light, moisture, radiation, scratches, marking, adhesive labels, and even playback on the discs. For those slashdotters who is not familiar with the physical made up of these optical discs, there is a very nice chapter explaining all the background. And if you only want to know how to care for your precious data, there is a one page summary. And yes, they agreed that glued-on labels are harmful."
Use a black felt pen. If you do it right you get to label the CD and defeat copy protection at the same time
I've had floppies, CDs, DATs, Zip disks and even tapes go corrupt over time.
If it wasnt for multiple backups I'd have been stuffed, so for my personal stuff (and work) I keep everything on the hard disk. Luckily the size doubles every few years, so as long as the size of the data doesnt outgrow the size of the drives, I'll be fine.
It wouldn't hurt to get all your old disks and tapes and (un?) back them up onto a spare hard drive before its too late.
You can't expect to wield supreme executive power, just because some watery tart threw a sword at you
Remember the days that cd roms where kept in caddies which were put into the cdrom reader. According to the guidelines this was a much better solution. Are these caddies and these special cd rom drives still available (new, not second hand) ?. Would be a market for professional users. I use a miltary case, used for storing munition & bombs, for storing my floppies. Since these metal cases are waterproof (and so protect against dust as well) they can enhance the life om my valuable cdroms as well.
I'm backing up all of my data onto 8-track tapes and storing them on the dashboard of my car. They will be safe forever there...
I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords
The Library of Congress has a guide right here!
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21 -- Mathematics is the Language of Nature.
Knowing how to store data for a long time might not help you much if you can't read it back in 20 years because some twisted DRM scheme stops you.
Anybody who was able to get the 50 page article know why doing the horizontal bop is bad?
"Do not: ...
8. Expose recordable discs to prolonged sunlight..."
in other words, make no change in your lifestyle whatsoever.
from the 50-page pdf:
Physical mishandling of the disc is usually the cause of polycarbonate*
layer damage. The polycarbonate may also flex or bend if
stored for a long period of time in a nonvertical position.
and
Long-term horizontal storage, particularly in a
heated environment, can cause the disc to become permanently
bowed. While the data may still be intact, the disc may not operate
properly in the drive or permit the laser to follow the track.
*3.1 Polycarbonate (Plastic) Substrate Layer
The polycarbonate substrate makes up most of the disc, including
the area that is read by the laser (opposite the label side on CDs). It
is present on both sides of a DVD, even a "single-sided" disc with a
label on one side. This substrate provides the disc depth necessary
to maintain laser focus on the metal and data layers. It also gives the
disc enough strength to remain flat. Anything in or on the polycarbonate
layer that interferes with the ability of the laser to focus on
the data layer will result in the misreading of data. Accordingly, fingerprints,
smudges, or scratches, as well as such substances as dirt,
dust, solvents, and excessive moisture (which polycarbonate will
absorb), can interfere with the ability of the laser to read the data.
Contact of any foreign material with the polycarbonate substrate
layer should be avoided.