• napoleonsdumbcousin@feddit.org
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    8 hours ago

    Just a quick reminder that discs that you burn yourself at home do degrade pretty quickly, much faster than pressed discs. I personally have had burned discs that failed after approx. 6 years. It can happen even faster if you use low-quality discs. Even pressed discs can fail after 20 years if you are unlucky.

    Using 2 big HDDs (2 for redundancy) full of your installers might be safer in the long run and also easier to manage and backup.

    https://digital-archivist.com/how-long-do-dvds-last-and-cds

    • It can happen even faster if you use low-quality discs.

      Yep. I got some no-name DVDs at Kaufland as they were just EUR 1 for a 10-pack. They started having read issues after just 4 years.
      Also, they easily peel apart with just fingers and no effort.

      Edit:
      Packaging: No-name DVD-R packaging. EAN: 4002903012032
      Media ID: MBI 01RG40

      • napoleonsdumbcousin@feddit.org
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        4 hours ago

        The worst case I experienced was a disc that disintegrated after a couple years. It got an actual extra hole in it, in a way that looked like somebody spilled acid on it and the acid burned right through the disc. In reality it just lay in my drawer.

    • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      6 hours ago

      And reminder that solid state drives (including thumb drives) can lose data after a couple years if they are not plugged in from time to time

    • Onyxonblack@piefed.social
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      8 hours ago

      Use M-Disc media. It’s said to last 1000 years. It’s expensive and very slow to rip at the suggested 4x speed.

      I’ve been very satisfied with them, and you just need a regular Blu-Ray drive.

      • Kyden Fumofly@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Cheapest solution is an HDD + one more for backups. M-Discs for 15-17€ per 100GB are for the games you wanna take to your grave.

        • Onyxonblack@piefed.social
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          2 hours ago

          I mean they are games that i no longer have to worry about data corruption or loss. Like ever. And i can Will these to family & friends. The cost is easily worth that!

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        5 minutes ago

        Yeah, normal burners are more like printers, where the write laser activates or deactivates a pigment which then either reflects or absorbs the read laser to represent 0/1. But that pigment can degrade over time, turning 1s into 0s.

        M-discs are instead etched and iirc use constructive and destructive interference so the reader (which is the same reader as normal discs, just the writer needs to specifically support M-disc) reads the 0/1. It will also degrade over time, but since it’s a thicker layer of difference, it will last significantly longer than a thin layer of pigment. And I bet that special m-disc specific readers could be made to read it again after it degrades to the point where the interference technique stops working, since an image could still show where the high and low points are, even if the waves don’t align perfectly anymore.

        In practice, I’ve found that the drive was way easier to find than the media for m-disc. Like most optical disc writers these days seem to support it but the discs are expensive af compared to non m-disc.

        Though when I was going through my old burnt CDs and DVDs, I was surprised at how well they were holding up. I was expecting at least some read errors by now but everything has been fine so far.

        Well, other than the data quality lol. Not like the readability of the file but stuff that took days to download back then would download today in seconds and a good monitor I got well after my early files was only 720p for its resolution. The data I prized as a youth is kinda sad today.