On Tue, Sep 15, 2015 at 03:32:27PM -0400, et...@757.org wrote: > >Pictures and movies can be original work - perhaps not for you, > >certainly mostly not for me (I have a few original pictures, but only a > >few), but I know graphic designers and photographers who have probably > >produced at least a gigabyte of original pictures each by now. And > >people into video production.... > > > I have a HD video production rig that goes out to some geek events > and I've used it in the past at stuff. The data generated is around > 5GB per hour (H264 1080i) > > A few years ago I bought a BD-R drive from Samsung, and recorded 3 > copies each of all the video from a few events that I wanted to put > on the shelf. I verified the media was the metal stuff not the dye > stuff (one is HTL, other is LTH, can't remember which is which.) 6 > months later all of the BD-R discs were unreadable. I blamed the > drive, RMA'ed with Samsung and confirmed with a friend on his > Pioneer -- nope, the media somehow lost all the data. Memorex > branded, was what you could find commercially local. The thing is a > lot of it is rebadged Ritek and other vendors. Data lost. Not > thrilled, and not sure I can trust that format after that issue. I > did buy some Verbatim BD-R media but haven't used it yet. Pretty > much keep everything on power consuming heat producing spinning > disk.
Well, I have been mulling buying a BD-writer for a while (much less now since my backups go to LTO3), thanks for the warning - looks like BD-R is another waste of time & money. > I've heard some horror stories with tape as well. > > When I worked at NASA the powderhorns we had originally had some > tape drive that was like $100,000 each but really I guess was made > from SVHS VCRs. STK literally had two drives on site all the time as > the ones that were swapped in that week when two would fail. I think > they converted it over to an IBM tape, can't remember what the SVHS > based thing was but it was single reel spooled out into the deck, > probably 9840 or something. > > I would cut multiple tapes of anything you care about! Depends very much on the tape technology. Anything based on VHS tape was a complete waste of time and money. Anything based on helical scan cannot be trusted (at a previous job, we would boot/install machines from DDS3 tapes and I kept 3-4 copies of each install tape. After two years I had a nice big stack of failed tapes). Linear scan (e.g. DLT, LTO) with read-after-write is the only tape technology worth trusting. Even so, for data you care about, keep multiple copies and multiple generations around. Kind regards, Alex. -- "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." -- Thomas A. Edison