From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: presotto@plan9.bell-labs.com To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-Id: <20010918130425.E9EC219A7C@mail.cse.psu.edu> Subject: [9fans] writable optical media Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 09:04:23 -0400 Topicbox-Message-UUID: ed8fdef4-eac9-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 We still have optical media from the start of the project that is readable. However, I have no idea how long this media lasts. Anyone out there know what the record is? It seems to me the technology for manufacturing the media changes quickly perhaps to get price down. I do know that, as usual, when going back to read old stuff we found a bunch of implementation errors that caused us to write part of file A in the middle of file B. Largely it was us not understanding the Sony jukebox. It was interesting to see vc core dumping because a piece of dennis' mailbox was embedded in the binary. Seanq recently copied all our old media into his new compressing file system and managed to get most of it. The hardest part was not the media but the slowly dying previous generations of optical devices. I guess the moral is: optical is nice, but when the lifetime of each round of technology is around 5 years, you have to recopy every few years anyways since the devices to read the indestructible media atrophy. Also, the density goes up fast enough that copying every few years means that you can always have everything on line.