NIST Releases Study Of CD/DVD Longevity
dirkin writes "The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released a preliminary study of the potential lifespan of CD-Rs and DVD-Rs. The PDF study is here. A good starting point for deciding what type of media to purchase to keep those backups and photos kicking around longer. (You DID buy the silver/gold alloy phthalocyanine CDs, didn't you?)"
the speed in which the CDR is burned sometimes it makes a difference, for the highest reliability I think 1x is the best.
Well - if you recall tape drives were the "big thing" in backup about 5-10 years ago. I have looked at 10 year old tape backups & they work just fine. Maybe we need to trust good old reliable tapes. Or the other (faster) solution would be external hard drive backups.
===> An eye for an eye makes everyone blind - MG
Or, rather literally translated into English: "Our sample shows that there is a lot of junk on the market. We have found cd-rs that should never have been for sale. Possibly it concerns rejected batches." Which suggests to me that the correct heading of this article should be: CD-Rs are like everything else: you get what you pay for.
What speed was used to write the CDs?
Were they all stored in the same place?
Were they all burned by the same CD burner?
Were they all burned from the same source (a single CD, hard drive, network, etc.)?
30 CDs sounds like an epidemic, but since they were all burned at the same time twenty months ago, there could be a lot of other reasons why all of these discs would go bad. If they were all burned at the same time, then they're effectively talking about one batch, regardless of how many different CD-R brands were used in that single batch.
Does the Dutch article cover this or is this just a scare story?
Take now into account earth's rotation and its magnetic field. It induces an albeit very slow movement of the molecules - the data layer degradation. The same effect causes btw certain currents in the Pacific oceans. While the movement is very slow and in the case of the ocean not very important, it does cause damage after a certain amount of time in the case of a CD-R. You should remember that the scale of the information storage units on a CD-R is in the nanometer range. The information is just "washed away" in an entropy-like effect.
However, you can slow this movement down. The molecular movement in the data layer is directed. So it can be reversed to a certain degree just be placing the CD-R the other way around. So, all you have to do is to mark the position of the CD-R in your rack exactly. And reverse it's position every month or so. This can increase to the lifetime of a CD-R about 150 percent. More can't achieved (in normal environment) because electric machines like your computer etc. create their own electro-magnetic fields. And the effects of these varing fields are much more difficult to negate.
BTW: the 100 percent wrong place to store your CD-Rs is on the top of your CRT.
Owner of a Mensa membership card.
FWIW, I can't remember having a single CD-R go bad. I've had some scrathed ones which took a while to read because the reading drive slowed to a crawl, but I got the data nonetheless. I even recently found what must have been one of the first CD-Rs I've ever burned. Must have been from around '96 or '97, it had my backup copy of Duke Nukem 3D on it, among other stuff, and everything read fine (the disc was a Sony CDQ-74CN).
Did you know you can fertilize your lawn with used motor oil?
I used to work for a company in Austin, TX whose speciality was optical drives (not CDs, but WORM mostly), and one of our customers was the National Archives. This was when CD-Rs were just coming out, and the NA was interested in a cost/benefit analysis of whether or not they could replace their expensive 14" WORM systems with cheap CD-Rs.
The first thing to understand is that WORM systems, true WORM systems, not the Magnetic-Optical pseudo-WORM systems, are built on ablation of material in the disc itself. In other words, you burn holes in the disc revealing a lower layer that is reflective. In the case of most discs, and Kodak especially, they were gold on the reflective layer for long-term stability. Various tests of accelerated degradation were performed in both climate stabilized and non-stabilized situations, and at worst, the discs were stable for 100 years before any error correction was necessary.
We decided to perform the same kind of evaluation of CD-Rs, and found that brand varied greatly. The best were stable for 3-4 years, the worst only 6-8 months if the climate changed dramatically. In addition, UV exposure had a radical impact on the life-span of the disc. Further research found out that the problem was the natural instability of the organic dyes that were used in the disc layers.
Basically, if the disc wasn't perfectly sealed (look at the work done in the referenced article, and how it starts at the edges), oxygen would get in and react with the dye, which would change it's characteristics relatively quickly. It doesn't take much before the dye structure collapses, and data becomes unreadable after a short period. While I suspect the dyes have gotten better over time, they're still organic last I knew, and still subject to degradation by contact with air. Quality control is the only thing that will get you anything here, and I suspect even the best dye-based discs can't make it past 20 years unless exposure to UV is totally eliminated.
What Kodak had developed was what they called "Century Discs", which were basically scaled down WORM discs, but in CD-ROM format. They were gold inside, non-reactive, and well made. They did, however, require a very expensive writer because they needed more power than a CD-R drive could ever hope to provide to force the burn away the spots. They were, however, readable in a normal drive.
That's just my experience, but everytime I've seen an organization talking about "archiving" on CD-R, I have issues with it. It's fine for "backup," where the data cycle is shorter, but true archival purposes (for example, financial data), it won't cut it. You either need to use WORM, or tape. Tape is, however, subject to problems over the cycles as well, witness the failing properties of 9-track tapes written by NASA in the 1970s (heard first hand, not sure where to find it written up). Linear-write systems are better than helical.
Just a few thoughts, but this is not an easy issue. You have to understand what you're storing, and how long it has to be readable before you consider an actual medium for storage.
Discerning pr0n collectors choose silver/gold alloy phthalocyanine CDs.
I still think that corn CDs are the best idea... you'll just need to reburn every once in a while.
It only becomes a problem if you're a big nacho fan...
that buying cheap crappy CD-Rs meant that your data died faster, but I had no idea how the degredation worked. What about the "armored" DVD-Rs from places like Datawrite? They're supposedly almost impossible to destroy. How well do they stand up?
I have some Kodak Gold CD-Rs stashed away for archival masters. I have no idea how long the DVD+Rs and DVD+RWs will last.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
As others have noted, the technologies used in the media are never printed on the packaging. Furthe, like many commodity items, the wrapper has nothing to do with who actually made the media. One spindle of Brand Y disks can be made by Manufacturer A, and the spindle twice its size, with the same labelling, also from Brand Y- will be made by Manufacturer Z. It is extremely difficult to be an educated consumer under these conditions.
It happens in lots of other places- gasolene is not "made" by Mobil; Mobil, Hess, Shell, Sunoco etc contract to area distributors. The distributors buy from whoever is the cheapest or distributes to their area; they slosh-mix any company-specific additives, if any, on the way to the station. Milk? Guess what- federal law requires that the bottling plant's registration number be printed on every bottle of milk. Next time you're in the store, notice how the brand name and generic store brand milk have the same prefix on that stamped number? Notice the brand name milk is pretty expensive compared to the store brand stuff? Dirty little secret of the milk industry, in plain view.
When I need CD-R/DVD-R media, I don't want to have to spend an hour sitting on some webforum reading posts to find out what the most reliable media looks like this week and where to buy it. I want to walk into a store, see "gold type cyno-whatever", see it's $2 more for a spindle of 20 than the other stuff, and walk out.
Though I'm sure there is collusion among manufacturers at the moment, it's only a matter of time before one manufacturer realizes they can market their product based on media type/chemistry thanks to this report educating buyers (the major PC mags will probably pick this up in an issue or two).
What bugs me is how bad my DVD-R disks SMELL. I have to hold the spindle at arm's length when I open the cakebox, and leave the room until the disk is done, because it reeks. I want to know what the hell makes it smell so bad...or, then again, maybe I don't...
Please help metamoderate.
Older discussion: Say Goodbye To Your CD-Rs In Two Years?
afterdawn had a discussion on CD-R brands a while back. In short, go with Taiyo Yuden. And to identify Taiyo Yuden?
The trouble with this approach is the same as the trouble with preserving old videotape material, something I used to be involved in.
;)
I worked for a museum that preserved such materials, and always wanted to establish a program not just to copy older videotape to newer analog formats (which already existed) but to copy and RE-copy those digital tapes on a two-year cyclical program; the digital data wouldn't degrade during the transfer, and by essentially replacing the media containing the data on a regular basis, we'd have a good chance of saving the material long-term.
I never got approval for a simple reason: tape stock is expensive, staff is expensive, and coordination of such an effort requires diligence. Similarly, you could use CD-R/DVD-R to back up your material and re-burn the discs on an ongoing rotation, but most people don't have that kind of discipline even if they have the money.
For me personally, I've found the best approach is to maintain the data on a redundant RAID array, with occasional backup to DVD-R. This way, the data itself will outlive the death of individual local drives, while the DVD-R only needs to serve as a short-term disaster-recovery solution.
Of course, once my critical dataset gets large enough to require more than a few DVD-Rs, I'll probably get lazy...aren't we about due for a new format by now?
"I still have tons of 5" floppy disks"
That could be a problem, since the only drives around are for 5.25" disks.
-Anonymous Phil