Those who advocate the use of computerized digital storage as a means
for overcoming degradation of paper rolls might be interested in the
following story in PC World.
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,124312,00.asp
In short, the CD you burn on your home PC relies on changes to a dye to
record the information. Over time, only two to five years, the dye can
die. The article recommends magnetic tape as having a storage life of
30 to 100 years. Who can assure, though, that the equipment to read
old magnetic tapes will be available? The 100-year-old rolls that we
have in our collections are generally still readable, and in some
instances quite playable.
Peter Neilson
[ Magnetic tape doesn't last forever, either -- I have several reels
[ from the 1960s and '70s in which the magnetic coating is crumbling
[ like my Supertone piano rolls of punched newsprint. MMDer A. B.
[ Bonds wrote in 1997, "The analog tapes of recent manufacture can
[ shed oxide within five years." See his report at
[ http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/Digests/199708/1997.08.01.01.html
[ -- Robbie
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