Lockheed Chosen For Electronic Records Archives
TrentL writes "How will we be able to read 1990's email messages in the year 2090? Will GIF files still be accessible in 2105? The US National Archives - tasked with preserving records "for the life of the republic" - has chosen Lockheed Martin to solve exactly this problem. Lockheed was awarded the $308M Electronic Records Archives contract after a year-long design competition. Full Disclosure: I worked on Lockheed's demo team."
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It's not just the government that needs this. Since we're funding this effort with our taxpayer dollars, I'm hopeful that some of the results from this work will lead to the availability of tools us normal folks can use to make sure our precious data can be preserved and passed down from one generation to the next.
For a start, they should stop using stupid proprietary formats like Real Video (the Press Conference Video on their website is only available for Real Player).
First off, you do not seem to know (or do not remember) that NASA is losing all sorts of data. They have 2 problems. Just 40 years ago, they were storing data on Tape Drives. The tapes are decaying so the data is disappearing. In addition, the formats are disappearing. Back then, all the specs were written down, and yet, the formats are hard to find in mountains of data.
SO now, forward a hundrew years. Just 15 years ago, I was working with CDs that would last 100 years (50 bucks a pop). Now, ppl seem to assume that the current disk will last that long. They will not. The old disks were made out of thin gold sheets in plastics. They are now some plastic in plastic. These CDs/DVDs will last less than 10 years (and probably closer to 5). In addition, the tape drives and hard disks are storing million time more data than what was in tape in the 60s. That is the storage density is WAY up. So now, as a small pox shows up, it will affect millions x more data, making recovery very difficult.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
YES! Finally a job after all those years studying Akkadian! Clay tablets are some of the most durable media I know. At least they have a proven record. Vast numbers of documents illustrating the fascinating world of accounting, esp. Sumerian sheep and goat transactions, is available thanks to the scribal choice of clay (combined with hot arid conditions). Will soon Lockheed HR soon be seeking 8-10 years of prior "Cuneiform/Pictographic" scribal experience? I can also read omens in the entrails of an ox. That can come in handy.