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Posted by Cliff Wild on 01/15/06 14:19
Joe wrote:
> jitterbean@yahoo.com wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 23:02:56 GMT, Lordy.UK <spam@recycle.bin> wrote:
>>
>>>> In my opinion the data is safer on DVD than on the hard drive.
>>>
>>> If you were talking about a normal DVD, I'd agree.
>>> But a re-writable DVD...
>>
>> Actually a re-writable is more stable than a DVD-R because the dye
>> used on the coating lasts longer before it begins to break down.
>> One is a vegetable derived dye and the other is a metallic dye
>> coating. The DVD+RW will last longer than a DVD+R.
>
> Well, you may be right about the COATING but I am not so sure about
> the DATA. Also, I don't know about DVD but back to the Stone-Age
> when most people were using CD (I don't remember if DVD bruner was
> available yet), and some of the tricks to recover the expensive (it
> was pretty expensive then) CD-RW was facing the SUN light (not so
> sure if have to cook in the sun or just the sun ray) for hours to
> erase all DATA on CD-RW to make it usable again.
>
> I never had problem to try myself, but few reported saying the trick
> worked for them (but very few reports). so, I also agree that DVD-RW
> has much better build, better scratch resistance, stronger coating
> etc.. but not the data. But only guessing as I have never had any
> problem with regular DVD nor DVD-RW (or CD-R and CD-RW) besides
> scratches on the data size that destroyed the disc.
Simple answer. None of these discs have been around as long as the HDD so
how is anyone able to do anything but speculate? I have hard drives that are
older than any disk format that still have accessible data. I would say
without a doubt that at this time HDDs will outlast any disk if they are
treated properly in the realm of archiving. Store disks without using them
and they may decay just sitting there. If discs are rotting already then
what does that say about them. Store HDDs in the same manner without having
them powered up and I say they are a better answer then just the disc alone.
CW
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