"jeffbert" wrote:I recently read a gizmag article that shocked me; while I suspected that burned Cds & DVDs might be susceptible to data loss if exposed to certain things, I had no idea that they were inherently doomed to lose data simply by the passing of time. This gizmag article,
M-DISC offers up to 1,000 years of data storage on a DVD compatible disc says that this new technology will solve that problem. But that means making new copies of all my burned discs!
But, there's a problem. Technology always gets obsolete in a short expanse to time, meaning there will be even better solutions to this.
In fact, the Solid State Drives SSD for short, are a great long term storage medium. If you ever had a flash drive or any form of media cards , you know what SSD storage is. They rarely if ever break down ,scratch or unable for use unless you ran over them with a truck or any automobile or hammered it or even had the raw internals exposed in salt water /deep water. Essentially they are the most efficient long term storage mediums ,but with USB 2.0, they are bogged down.
The Thunderbolt format is the first step to proper ultra fast SSD usage since there are no moving parts and just take seconds to connect and have decent writing speeds, the Thunderbolt addition since it can transfer multiple GBs per second would make flash drives of high capacity possible if not cost worthy. Once the costs go down for the SSD large scale mediums and Thunderbolt add ons go down in price , you pretty much have a long term backup solution which will be extremely fast and rarely ever crash.
Ultimately , the best storage is in bacteria, cells or Crystals.