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Archive DVDs, 160 years

I'm extremely dubious - it reads like snake oil. The 'test' certificate is a farce, and seems to suggest that extrapolating from 3 data points (off 300-10000hrs) at accelerated testing at 60/70/80C, you can then fit a simple exponential and extrapolate out to 160 years. I also don't understanding what they mean by 'metal substitutes an organic dye', I don't see how that's possible (or even desirable), I believe DVD-r technology use a Phthalocyanine dye, which can be in a metal complex but that has no direct bearing on lifetime!

There are archival quality DVD and CDR media available (from big reputable companies), I think either JVC or Sony recently released some DVD media which is compatible with standard equipment, and Kodak used to do a 'ultimate gold' CDR which was meant for 100 hrs.

Predictions of degradation time are a challenge - accelerated testing is no guarantee.
 
timrivett said:
(or we could just revert to paper...)

Archive quality, acid-free paper of course. No medium lasts forever, accept that and produce a protocol for regular copying onto new media, of whatever form. And, to quote a very sensible IT pundit no file should be considered to exist until there are at least two separate copies.
 
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