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Hey Gang

was chatting with a PC tech and convo got into shelf life af CDR's and other types of media

seems that CDR etc may only have shelf life of 5 - 10 years,,,

I may have to start dating my CD's and checking them now lol

let me know what you think

http://support.gateway.com/s/tutorials/Tu_847854.shtml

SI

Comments

JoeH Sun, 04/24/2005 - 11:15

There's a popular saying that unless your DATA exists in three separate places, it does not truly "exist". Same goes for backup, I guess. I dont' know the REAL shelf-life of untouched CDr's, but I do what I can to help them survive.

I do the following:

1. Copy to client (Master, Clone, finished product, etc. If they use a third party replication plant, there will be a copy there, as well.)

2. Copy stays on our shelves here, while the project is still "hot" and viable, esp for additional copies, etc.

3. Copy & all materials (tapes, HD's, CD'rs, DVD'rs, etc.) goes to our off-site warehouse for indefinite storage. (And, as each client's backlog grows, so does their dependence on us for help in retreiving items for updates, re-releases, remixes, re-edits, grant proposals, additional copies, etc.)

At the warehouse, we do the following: each item goes into its own 6x9" locking, clear, plastic bag, which has a title strip and info area. (Of course, it's clear and you can easily read the inside contents, as well. Duh.) We also put a small silica gel bag in each, to keep moisture at bay. Each bag for each project goes into a main box for each client (or one large box for 'one-offs" that pile up along the way). It's all on shelving that doesn't involve squeezing, or stacking, or abuse in any way. We're on the top floor (Climate controlled) at a local storage facility, so it's air-conditioned & humidity controlled as well. When we leave, the lights go out; there's no sunlight there, either.

This may sound expensive and extravagant, but it's one more service we offer the client (at no extra charge, either.) I figure it this way: I absorb the storage fee into my monthly expenses, and have lots of space for other things I don't need RIGHT NOW, but don't want to throw out, either. (Certain analog gear, as well as furniture, vinyl records, paper receipts, etc.)

If you can justify the cost of an off-site storage space in your biz expenses, you'll sleep better knowing you've done the best you can to preserve your work for the long haul.

Beyond that, the only other way is burying it underground at Iron Mountain or something.....and that's probably even MORE expensive....