|  | Posted by Gene on 02/09/07 21:29 
Sorry, I REALLY am not trying to be argumentative - I justdo not understand what you are saying.
 
 I do not think you fully understand the history of the internet,
 or how it is currently structured. The internet was initially
 funded to send a message (in parts) via telephone line
 links so that it would be secure. That is, if someone read
 1/2 of the message, then they probably would not completely
 understand said classified message. This was during the cold war,
 if I remember.  Then the universities started playing with it, then
 NASA used some of its enormous budget & got involved. Today,
 it is basically the same animal. Probably not much of a security
 vehicle for national defense today, but a great way for the world
 to communicate with text, as well as download full-length movies,
 etc.  Mechanically, it's basically the same old internet, sending
 out packets to nodes all over the world, then reassembling the
 packets for the final product.
 
 The internet is nothing more than a lot of computers connected
 together via telephone & other links.  My ISP is one, your ISP is one,
 if I had an old PC in my back room connected to the internet, it would
 be a node.  The nodes usually have hard drives attached, some have
 tape drive backup(s), there are a lot of data storage possibilities.
 
 When I hit return on THIS text message, it will go to my ISP, and from there
 "who knows" where it will be routed. If I am not mistaken, they still break
 up this
 text message into at least two parts, for security. THIS text message will
 be
 spread over the internet, in pieces - who knows where.  However, it will
 eventually
 be patched back together and displayed in this newsgroup as a string of
 text.
 Bits and pieces of THIS text message may remain on certain nodes for
 some time - never looked into how long each node retains said pieces.
 
 What I "thought" you initially suggested was that I place my family A/V data
 onto the internet as a better solution to my burning the MiniDV tapes onto
 DVD-Rs at my home for permanent storage. If I placed my camcorder data on
 the internet,
 (other than FTP it to some place like my ISP or other computer) then it
 would be scattered
 all over the USA and possibly the world.  How would you ever retrieve the
 pieces tomorrow,
 let alone 20 years from now?  My A/V data would presumably make it to a
 final destination,
 like my ISP's hard drive(s), etc., or some company that provides storage
 space.  All of
 the packet data on the internet would eventually be erased, except for the
 data at the final
 destination. There is no enormous storage space out there called the www or
 internet, or whatever
 that permanently stores your data for 20 years. Your data goes to a storage
 device, presumably
 at your ISP, or other computer that you choose. There, it gets archived onto
 disk, tape,
 or whatever storage media for storing for the 20 years.  It would have to be
 stored on random access
 media to be easily downloaded for your use, else you would have to send in a
 request for
 certain data to be copied from your archive tape to hard drive, so you could
 download a video clip.
 
 I do not believe that any company can stay in business providing 1GB of data
 storage
 for 20 years for a total of $0.06/USD, which is my current cost to burn a
 high quality DVD-R at my home.
 In the future, we may see links that are a LOT faster than T1, and uploading
 50GB would
 not be a big deal, but even then, I still would not want folks warehousing
 my private personal
 camcorder A/V data - at any price.
 
 If you know of a place on the web that will do this for free, or $0.06/GB
 for 20 years guaranteed
 storage, please post their URL.   I'm never too old to learn new stuff:-)
 I think that I would better understand what you are saying by reading their
 web page.
 
 Sorry if I misunderstood what you were initially suggesting,
 I'm really confused by your comments.
 
 Hmmmm - I'm not sure if FTP breaks the data into packets or not?
 I just assumed that it was packets too, just never thought ~ it until
 today:-)
 Academic, but anyone know?
 
 Gene
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 "Richard Crowley" <rcrowley@xp7rt.net> wrote in message
 news:5341gbF1qlft4U1@mid.individual.net...
 > "GMAN" wrote ...
 >>  "Richard Crowley"  wrote:
 >>>"Gene" wrote ...
 >>>> Sorry, but I still do not understand how anyone could store my data
 >>>> as cheaply as I can. That would assume that I was willing to
 >>>> allow someone to view my family movies - which I would NEVER do.
 >>>>
 >>>> As of today, my total out-of-pocket cost to store a gigabyte of data
 >>>> is ~ six cents/US ($0.06). That is on a very high quality DVD-R,
 >>>> single. I can't even conceive of someone providing me with 20 years
 >>>
 >>>I think there will be LOTS of horror stories here in less than 20
 >>>years of people who thought that writable optical discs would
 >>>provide some sort of "archival quality" storage.  Good luck.
 >>>But whatever you do, don't throw away the original tapes.
 >>>
 >>>
 >> Yet, you are going to trust your ISP to keep your data safe
 >> for that long on  their hardware?
 >
 > 1) Thats just silly.  An ISP is not an archive.  An ISP is a place
 > to host my web pages, and a SMTP server to shuttle my email.
 >
 > 2) Reputable ISPs run industrial-strength backup/restore
 > systems. (Using digital mag tape.) To cover hardware failures
 > at their end. I expect nothing more (or less) from any ISP.
 >
 > Or were you addressing your question to someone else?
 >
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