Author Topic: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore  (Read 33874 times)

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Offline woodchips

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #25 on: August 16, 2015, 06:21:30 pm »
I know nothing about the ins and outs of why they are closing. I have been an occasional customer over the years but postage to the UK isn't cheap. I heard about the closure and hopefully in the next week or so will arrive boxes 5 and 6 of the sale manuals. I think I might now have spent more on postage than manuals with the discount on these last boxes. Thanks Becky. 

As has been pointed out, to keep in business then they have to sell manuals. As with any secondhand item 5% of the items account for 95% of the sales or enquiries, think ASICs from Tek 2465 scopes, who wants the CPU board, or the bit of bent metal that holds the widget on? Who fixes things now? Look at the various threads, buy a Rigol and stuff anything more than 5 years old? My manuals were mostly boring, Tek 7000 stuff and similar, but ManualsPlus had originals, and I an tired of rubbish copies and it was worth the cost to buy and ship them across the pond.

This is a very common occurance now in my experience, no one is interested in older things, generally, it is all apparently on the internet. I had a nice collection of electromechanical computers, mostly navigation equipment from aircraft, inertial gyros, air data computers, ground position indicators and similar. When I had to downsize it went for auction, would have got more at a scrap yard. Similarly old books, 3rd edition Britannica, a Pantologia, runs of the AJS and similar, these are now valued just for the plates they contain, maps are best, the plate of yet another bridge is used to light the fire. It has taken me years to to actually accept that the things I spent so much time and money on acquiring are now worthless. I have ST412 working disc drives, no interest, scrapped, similarly with much other computer stuff. No one now has the space to store this stuff, and museums don't seem interested either.

I am pleased that I bought the manuals I did from MP, and they will be used and appreciated. But they will also go for recycling when I die, what is a 7T11? In the end I had a choice, pay MP for the manuals and postage, or keep that money in my savings account. All the others who complain about the manuals being dumped perhaps should have put some money where their mouth is, and bought a couple of thousand $ worth when they could. I did.

 

Offline NickAmes

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #26 on: August 16, 2015, 07:26:53 pm »
Jason has published an update: http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/4695
 

Offline TerraHertz

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #27 on: August 17, 2015, 02:15:55 am »
I know nothing about the ins and outs of why they are closing. I have been an occasional customer over the years but postage to the UK isn't cheap. I heard about the closure and hopefully in the next week or so will arrive boxes 5 and 6 of the sale manuals. I think I might now have spent more on postage than manuals with the discount on these last boxes. Thanks Becky. 

I've been a long term customer too. Also bought what I could afford after hearing of the shutdown. But it wasn't anything like what I wanted to buy. I'm poor atm, though that won't last forever.

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Look at the various threads, buy a Rigol and stuff anything more than 5 years old? My manuals were mostly boring, Tek 7000 stuff and similar, but ManualsPlus had originals, and I an tired of rubbish copies and it was worth the cost to buy and ship them across the pond.

My view is that at least some people should keep test gear that is repairable, as opposed to contemporary gear which isn't. As a 'just in case' precaution, for potential economic and therefore technological regression scenarios.
Also as a collector of old gear partly for the historical interest, it seems stupid to have the gear, but not the original manual, which is part of the aesthetic. And in addition, I find electronic copies pathetic and nearly unusable in a practical sense, even if the quality is good. Which it so frequently isn't. Nothing beats having the stack of paper large foldout schematics.

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This is a very common occurance now in my experience, no one is interested in older things, generally, it is all apparently on the internet.
Yes, and do you know the history of fads and manias? Who can be sure the Internet is going to last forever in its current form? It's only been around what, 20 years so far. This is not sufficient basis to predict eternal availability.

Are you aware of moves by the fascists in the US government, to legislate 'sharing of technical information on the net' into a 'terrorist crime'? Seriously... Unbelievable, but it fits with those arseholes' mentalities.

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I had a nice collection of electromechanical computers, mostly navigation equipment from aircraft, inertial gyros, air data computers, ground position indicators and similar. When I had to downsize it went for auction, would have got more at a scrap yard.

Tragic. Did you offer it via places like this and the vintage computing forums? Or was that before you knew of them?

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Similarly old books, 3rd edition Britannica, a Pantologia, runs of the AJS and similar, these are now valued just for the plates they contain, maps are best, the plate of yet another bridge is used to light the fire. It has taken me years to to actually accept that the things I spent so much time and money on acquiring are now worthless.

You're making a big mistake. The same made by many people, which results in relics being so very rare after a few decades. You're allowing yourself to be conditioned by the prevailing view that monetary value of the moment, is equivalent to moral worth. This is a falsehood. You should decide what value is, within your own moral code. F*ck opinions of others to the contrary.

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I have ST412 working disc drives, no interest, scrapped, similarly with much other computer stuff. No one now has the space to store this stuff, and museums don't seem interested either.

Sob. More tragedy. I'd have taken all that stuff. Incidentally, this 'no one has the space' is not just by accident, it's the result of deliberate social manipulation, intended to disempower the majority of the population. A deliberate side effect of the way the economic system is structured at the moment.

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I am pleased that I bought the manuals I did from MP, and they will be used and appreciated. But they will also go for recycling when I die.
How soon will that be do you think? Any chance you could put me down in your will, to take whatever techno-relics you still have? I'm totally serious, please PM me if you'll consider it.  I'm 60 now, will be around a while yet. See http://everist.org/NobLog/ I have a lot of Tek 7000 series stuff, but mostly not yet recommissioned due to the sequencing of getting my workshop set up.

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what is a 7T11? In the end I had a choice, pay MP for the manuals and postage, or keep that money in my savings account. All the others who complain about the manuals being dumped perhaps should have put some money where their mouth is, and bought a couple of thousand $ worth when they could. I did.

So did I, but it wasn't anywhere near that much. The timing is what bugs me. In the next year or so, I'll likely be forced to sell my current large property due to a zoning change. (http://everist.org/no-rezone/ hmmm... needs an update.)  I expect to end up with more than enough to rebuild in the country somewhere, including a *much bigger* workshop, and live comfortably. One of the items on my 'new workspace' requirements list, is a _large_ library space. Medium scale library. I wish MP had waited to shut down till that was set up.
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Offline TheElectricChicken

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #28 on: August 17, 2015, 06:30:11 am »
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All the places I've seen that collect information for free don't allow it to be copied in bulk, they sit on it to make money out of it. archive.org, wikipedia, JSTOR, you name it, you can't download it.
archive.org? Jason Scott works there and they certainly do allow downloading...

can you send them 300tb of hard drives and a cheque ? not for any of them.
 

Offline Leiothrix

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #29 on: August 17, 2015, 11:25:23 pm »
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All the places I've seen that collect information for free don't allow it to be copied in bulk, they sit on it to make money out of it. archive.org, wikipedia, JSTOR, you name it, you can't download it.
archive.org? Jason Scott works there and they certainly do allow downloading...

can you send them 300tb of hard drives and a cheque ? not for any of them.

English wikipedia download link: https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20150805/

Around 12GB, totally free (well, CC-BY-SA, but no $$).  Admittedly this does not contain other media, but you can get those too with a bit of mucking around (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Database_download#Where_are_the_uploaded_files_.28image.2C_audio.2C_video.2C_etc..2C_files.29.3F)


 

Offline Tothwolf

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #30 on: August 18, 2015, 01:14:25 am »
Sounds like the Jason Scott already has some connection with Archive.org. The short term issue is sorting, hauling everything off and storing it until they can come up with a plan for archiving it.

What sorting? It's already neatly sorted and indexed. The hard part would be preserving that during a move.
Anyone in the US able to think of a way someone could put a legal hold on the destruction?

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I really hope they are checking printings/dates/revisions when eliminating "duplicates."
I would bet money that isn't happening. (Ha ha, if I had any. But then, I'm certain I'd win the bet, so...)

You guys need to watch what you say. Becky is aware of this thread and had been following it.

As for duplicate sorting, according to Becky, Jason and others have been hard at work.

I've personally spent over $1000 on manuals from them this year alone, but that only goes so far towards their USD $10,000 a month building lease.
 

Online edavid

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #31 on: August 18, 2015, 04:44:57 am »
Jason posted some photos today: https://twitter.com/textfiles/with_replies
 

Offline Tothwolf

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Offline amyk

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #33 on: August 18, 2015, 05:59:49 am »
That's a pretty good effort, but why do they seem to be leisurely reading through the manuals...? I was expecting more "grab and go", with people pulling armfuls of them out at a time and stuffing them into boxes, since the priority here seems to be to get them out of the place ASAP. All the sorting, duplicate culling, etc. can  come later, after they've been moved out...
 

Offline Tothwolf

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #34 on: August 18, 2015, 06:12:54 am »
That's a pretty good effort, but why do they seem to be leisurely reading through the manuals...? I was expecting more "grab and go", with people pulling armfuls of them out at a time and stuffing them into boxes, since the priority here seems to be to get them out of the place ASAP. All the sorting, duplicate culling, etc. can  come later, after they've been moved out...

My guess would be that they are checking the document id and/or revision numbers (and maybe posing for the camera). The reason they were trying to pull just one copy of each was the sheer volume of material, however I don't think this is a good idea when done in a rush and on a deadline because there is a lot of potential for accidentally leaving behind documents.

I'm not sure from that last post by Jason if they've decided to take additional copies of material or not, but given the massive amount of work just packing this stuff is, they definitely need all the help they can get.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2015, 06:14:34 am by Tothwolf »
 

Offline TheElectricChicken

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #35 on: August 18, 2015, 06:47:21 am »
can you send them 300tb of hard drives and a cheque ? not for any of them.

Around 12GB, totally free (well, CC-BY-SA, but no $$).  Admittedly this does not contain other media, but you can get those too with a bit of mucking around (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Database_download#Where_are_the_uploaded_files_.28image.2C_audio.2C_video.2C_etc..2C_files.29.3F)
[/quote]

actually you can't. You can't send hard drives and get the dataset of images and video to run through your latest AI project at UNI or what-have-you. The text is tiny, 12GB would probably only be the current state of the project, which is not worth looking at really. They continue to bloat their media collecting with something called GLAM or some such, basically photographing library and gallery collections and then putting it into their own un-indexed, un-browsable, un-downloadable hole in the ground from which there is no return. Someone who was doing some thesis was offering $500 per terabyte or something crazy to download the images from wikipedia, I doubt it can be done. You know, without a closet to hide the laptop in and the FBI trying to kill you like Aaron Schwartz.
 

Offline TerraHertz

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #36 on: August 18, 2015, 07:37:05 am »
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I really hope they are checking printings/dates/revisions when eliminating "duplicates."
I would bet money that isn't happening. (Ha ha, if I had any. But then, I'm certain I'd win the bet, so...)

You guys need to watch what you say. Becky is aware of this thread and had been following it.

As for duplicate sorting, according to Becky, Jason and others have been hard at work.

Hi Becky! (Guy D from Sydney here.)

I still bet 'duplicate culling' (not sorting, they are ALREADY sorted)  isn't happening in any adequate sense. Revision and serial number comparison is *hard* and there's no way it could be done for that archive in the time available. Especially not while also maintaining overall sort order and catalog to shelf grid references.

Also even if it was, it's still a tragedy, since the purpose of the the 'save & move' would ideally be to keep the manuals in this collection available for future purchasers. Which I don't expect will be possible, and that makes me feel ill. Both on principle and because it makes my future equipment life harder. It's like watching a priceless library burn, and nothing I can do about it. Feel like I want to kill someone. Not Becky or the volunteers! Three cheers for their effort. The owner, maybe, depending on what the actual situation is. How come this got left to the last minute? Or perhaps the building owner. Or maybe a bunch of bankers, for creating a debt-riddled system in which a business like ManualsPlus can't own its own premises clear of debt, and have no overheads beyond water, power and maybe land rates.

There seems to be a lot of 'save only one copy of each for scanning' attitude going on here. You can guess what I think of that. Current scanning and encoding file formats are NOT ADEQUATE! There'll be better schemes in future, but till then save all the physical copies, in as many hands as possible to prevent this kind of mass loss.
But, since I can't help or influence in any way, who cares what I think.

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towards their USD $10,000 a month building lease.

I still wish it was possible to do some checking of background details to this. Is "$10K/month" for that not particularly big space in an old subdivided factory in semi-rural area sensible? I don't know, but it does seem a bit hard to believe. Did the lease actually 'get lost'? How & why, given there's not exactly a huge swell in demand for industrial real estate in the USA these days.
Who owns the building, and what's their story?

I know I'll never see answers to these questions, which makes me feel even more ill about the whole thing,
« Last Edit: August 18, 2015, 07:40:30 am by TerraHertz »
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Offline amyk

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Offline c4757p

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #38 on: August 19, 2015, 08:24:33 pm »
TerraHertz, dude, instead of bitching about the manuals not being handled in the exact way you prefer, could you perhaps try just being thankful someone bothered to keep them at all? kthxbye.
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Offline Deathwish

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #39 on: August 19, 2015, 08:26:45 pm »
I own a pulse generator, a Thurlby TG105, IF there is a scanned service manual for it then I will buy it for a reasonable price but ONLY if I am then given permission to put it online for free in case anyone else wants it.

Sorry if that hurts other peoples senses but I believe that such things should be free rather than locked away like so many other things in history
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Offline ez24

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #40 on: August 19, 2015, 10:06:11 pm »
Is there anyone from this forum who "has boots on the ground"?  I mean is there anyone here who is there?  I have a somewhat difficult time trying to figure out what is going on and if there is someone with boots on the ground,  I could concentrate on their comments.

thanks
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Online edavid

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #41 on: August 19, 2015, 11:15:17 pm »
Is there anyone from this forum who "has boots on the ground"?  I mean is there anyone here who is there?  I have a somewhat difficult time trying to figure out what is going on and if there is someone with boots on the ground,  I could concentrate on their comments.

Here's an article that gives the background: http://www.radioworld.com/article/manuals-plus-announces-pending-closure/275714
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Manuals Plus Announces Pending Closure
on 04.27.2015

Manuals Plus owner Nick Dawson confirmed plans to shutter the Maryland-based test and measurement equipment manual distributor in a phone interview Friday. He says the closing of this division will not affect the operations of parent company Ridge Equipment Co. Inc.

Dawson says the company’s warehouse lease will be up in June, and factors like the increasing availability of PDF versions of the manuals contributed to the decision.

He explained that the current building has 1.6 linear miles of shelving, all filled with inventory. In order to avoid throwing them out, Manuals Plus says it will accept best offers for the manuals, offering an opportunity to stock up on these publications at a discount. Send queries to sales@manualsplus.com — specific requests will be given priority.

Dawson noted his affection for radio clubs and encouraged operators to contact Manuals Plus with requests for manuals.

Additionally, the company will host a warehouse sale in the first week of June, prior to its planned closure at the end of the month.
 

Offline edpalmer42

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #42 on: August 20, 2015, 01:48:23 am »
Good News Everybody!!

From the Manuals Plus website:

"As many of you may have heard, Manuals Plus is closing its doors.

We have made an agreement with The Internet Archive to donate our entire library to their collection. You can find information about them at (https://archive.org/about/). "

Hopefully, this really means the entire library rather than whatever Jason manages to save.

Ed
 

Online edavid

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #43 on: August 20, 2015, 03:16:41 am »
From the Manuals Plus website:

"As many of you may have heard, Manuals Plus is closing its doors.

We have made an agreement with The Internet Archive to donate our entire library to their collection. You can find information about them at (https://archive.org/about/). "

Hopefully, this really means the entire library rather than whatever Jason manages to save.

They are just referring to Jason's project.  He did his best to save one of everything though.
 

Offline Tothwolf

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #44 on: August 20, 2015, 03:38:15 am »
I heard from Becky this afternoon (I've been in regular contact with her) and she has said that anything left is now up for grabs. This is part of what she wrote me today:

"If you know of anyone that wants to come here & help themselves over the next two days they are welcome. (Only if you weed the ones that want to meet us with 2x4's) Please have them contact me through this email. I do not particularly want them to just show up."

Becky's email address is: sales -at- manualsplus.com

Given how busy she has been, I suspect email is much better than trying to reach her via phone.

[...and it should go without saying, but be nice. It wasn't her decision to close down.]
 

Offline VK3DRB

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #45 on: August 20, 2015, 12:49:05 pm »
We are fools and history tends to repeat itself...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_of_Alexandria

Digital media will not last forever. And the world's knowledge will not necessarily be backed up. Certainly won't last as long as the Dead Sea Scrolls or the Rosetta Stone.

There is data for many ASICs, because the companies that created them are no longer in existence or no longer care, or the data-books have long been thrown out and no-one backed them up on digital media.

I was just damned lucky one website had the source code listing to the early Intel 4004 based calculators from the 1970's. Another example the STAC Timer chip. No chip data exists for that on the web or probably on the planet. A shame really, because I still own a STAC Timer, but there is no data for it besides dumb pin-outs.

However I do have every SERVICE MANUAL to every model of AWA Fisk radio ever made. Not only the schematic, but alignment, assembly procedures and parts lists. I suspect it is the only complete collection in the world. In perfect condition and not available digitally. These are locked up off site with a secure documents company for safe keeping.

Remember the great fire of Alexandria. One day in the future, the only record of our existence in the 21st century might be that of a god called Bieber :popcorn:.
 

Offline TheElectricChicken

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #46 on: August 20, 2015, 02:28:26 pm »
We have made an agreement with The Internet Archive to donate our entire library to their collection.

well, until some troll tells the IA that the manuals are copyright and It can't publish them, at which point they'll be well locked away out of reach as their own property. Kickstarter perhaps ?
 

Offline Richard Crowley

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #47 on: August 20, 2015, 06:00:33 pm »
I saw something very interesting yesterday on YouTube which has some surprising things to say about preservation...
30 minute documentary, recommended: "Lost Forever: The Art of Film Preservation"   
https://youtu.be/3TEgrdAlofk

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IS DIGITAL THE ANSWER?

"There is, out in the world, not among professionals, but among ordinary people, there is the general notion that not only has everything been preserved, but that is all available on the internet or on DVD through Netflix or whatever.  Even there might be 40 or 50 thousand DVDs out there, this is only a very small proportion of all of the films that have been produced." -- Jan-Christopher Horak - Director, UCLA Film & Television Archive

"Media is fragile. Film is fragile, it doesn't last forever. Videotape is even more fragile. And digital bits. We haven't figured out a way to save digital bits beyond a few years. If you collect material that is digital, you have to keep migrating to the next generation carrier. You know what happens to all your floppy disks right now, what happened to your Zip drive. So, by its very nature, moving images and all sort of time-based media are indeed ephemeral"  Rick Prelinger - Prelinger Archives

"Of course, we had 35mm film we've had for 115 years. We've had digitallity now for maybe, lets stretch it, maybe 20 years?  In 20 years we've gone through 30 different formats. So every 18 months the industry is creating new formats that are incompatible with the previous format." - Horak

"What we discovered is that huge amounts of material were being copied to digital formats and then discarded, with the belief that the digital copies would last forever. And that's not the case. Think of the hard drive in your computer or DVD or CDs that you have, and how fragile they are. And how they can fail, and how you can lose data. How anybody who works with computers always advises people to back up their content and so on, and things that we all hardly ever do. So, we do use digital technologies, but it is with great care."  Patrick Loughney - Chief, Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation

"Digital is part of the problem now. It's not part of the solution. We're still preserving films on film because film is going to last so much longer, and be useful for so much longer than any digital file will be."  -- Mike Pogorezelski - Director, Academy Film Archive

"The acetate, or polyester film which is what we use these days in the analog world, if it is stored properly, cold and dry, we know through tests that have been done, it will last 500, 600, 700 years, maybe longer. Through nothing but passive storage. Very cold, very dry, put it on the shelf. And we know in a couple hundred years, we can pull it out and it will still look good." - Horak

https://youtu.be/3TEgrdAlofk?t=27m13s
« Last Edit: August 20, 2015, 06:02:54 pm by Richard Crowley »
 

Offline c4757p

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #48 on: August 20, 2015, 06:08:09 pm »
We are fools and history tends to repeat itself...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_of_Alexandria

Digital media will not last forever. And the world's knowledge will not necessarily be backed up. Certainly won't last as long as the Dead Sea Scrolls or the Rosetta Stone.

Digital media can be copied and backed up and converted between formats and storage types and etc etc etc indefinitely. The data is finally separate from the medium, as it should be. It has way more chance at longevity than paper.

Anyone who thinks digital media can't last thinks "digital media" is a filing cabinet full of CD-Rs.
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Online edavid

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Re: Rescue mission - 25,000 manuals, Baltimore
« Reply #49 on: August 20, 2015, 06:10:58 pm »
It sounds like the ideal format would be digital data recorded on 35mm film.
 


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