Mick,

Herein lies the issue:
We all keep talking about Joe Public (Sixpack) and his issues with
archiving.  The reality is that whether he is shooting film or
digital, he isn't archiving in any manner that will provide longevity.

With film, if he isn't throwing his negs away, he is just throwing
them in a drawer or box.  Not caring about heat or humidity or having
them processed in good chemicals.  Nope, cheapest, quickest way
possible.  Then forget about it.  Probably can't even find them,
especially a specific frame if the need ever arises. Not to mention
how much he damages them just looking at them (handling them with bare
hands, scratching them by sliding them across the table, etc).

With digital, if he is having a cd made, more than likely it will be
thrown into the same drawer or box, with equal care about
environmental issues.  Time will do it's work on the cd's as you
suggest.

In the end, not much archiving really happened.  He might get lucky
and be able to use his pictures down the road, but don't count on it.

The reality is that archiving takes some thought, planning and caring
whether you are shooting film or digital.  Those that really care
about the longevity of their photos will learn proper methods and the
rest will reap what they sow.

For those on this list, I suspect that by and large archives are
reasonable no matter medium they are using.  I can say that I have
some negatives my wife shot on cheap film that are fading badly and
some of my slides shot back in the 70's and 80's are starting to show
some problems.  My only recourse with those is to scan them and fix
and preserve them digitally.

-- 
Best regards,
Bruce


Thursday, August 26, 2004, 6:46:33 AM, you wrote:


>>I'll bet my digital archives out last my film archives long term however
>>since I treat each media type with equal respect I guess I'll be fine in
>>the next 10 years, I already have reliable 10 year old CD archives and I've
>>just successfully migrated it all to DVD.

MM> You may not have the problems so much (as you are prepared to look after the
MM> output carefully) however, I am finding increasingly that my old music CDs
MM> (some go back to the mid 80's) are degrading - sound quality is impaired but
MM> some have even started skipping and a few are unplayable. This isn't due to
MM> dirt or scratches (I am extremely careful with them), it's down to
MM> oxidation. The same is going to happen to CDRs and DVDs and when it does the
MM> likelyhood of getting the data off of them may be very slim. I think this
MM> will be more of a problem for Joe Public digi-snappers (as we have been
MM> talkign about). I think serious amateurs and pros will be better able to
MM> deal with it.

MM> Mick...




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