In article <HfU5T+(E-Mail Removed)>, Clint Sharp
(E-Mail Removed) says...
> In message <Xns997F75B5DDDE0daverymanhotmailcom@80.5.182.99 >, Dave Ryman
> <(E-Mail Removed)> writes
> >Try buying the original copys on DVD: They should last much longer.
> >
> Interesting question though, I have loads of edited DV footage from just
> before my daughter's birth to date, 3.5 years and counting and I've been
> wondering similar things.
>
Make a copy every few years onto whatever the current mass-storage
medium is, while you still have a drive that can read the previous
version. I suppose that ideally you should be checking the media every
so often to see what the error correction rate is, but any sample you
check may not be representative of the worst example and just by reading
the disks you could be causing additional errors, and you should be
checking that the drive still functions but each spin-up is one step
closer to failure.
Transfer the data to papyrus scrolls and store them in clay pots in a
cave in a desert somewhere.