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As the information age marches on, we are increasingly faced with the problem of effective data loss through inaccessibility of old storage formats. In future, a potential worry is the digital photo - many of these will languish on CDROMs without ever being printed.
A centre could be created with
rooms of old storage format readers, hooked up to modern computers running "virtual machines" - simulators of old mainframes and other legacy devices. These computers might run old programs on those early 80s "cake tin" hard drives, 8" floppy disks, even card readers. Others could read microfiche, 8-track tapes, and 78rpm records. The most popularly-accessed device would probably be the VCR simulator.
The user would have the option to copy to the latest format (together with a copy of the appropriate virtual machine software to run at home, if necessary).
April 30, 2015. "The Legacy Storage Centre, in response to increasing demand, has installed three more DVD readers. We continue to urge members of the public to transfer their precious material to the latest format at their earliest convenience, and to use our service as a last resort."
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Annotation:
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I know what you mean, [Pa`ve] - when I entered the workforce, our office still had a SCADA system running on an ICL ME 29, which had 80Mb platters. I saw one which had suffered a HD crash - boy, it was the real deal in those days. |
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A very good idea but it would almost certainly be opposed on principal by the DRM crowd. |
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The formats we're looking at here mostly predate DRM |
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Finally somewhere I can go to transfer my thousands of punch-cards onto Betamax. |
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Most banks have one of these. Often several. They need to have occasional access to old data, so the old machine just gets stuffed in a corner. |
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[BunsenHoneydew] The formats that this would help with today predate DRM but 2015's DVD players wouldn't. The DRM crew would prorably try to step on this before it affected them. |
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Just made some 78RPM to wav transfers for archiving purposes. It's hard to automate that sort of thing because you get into the realm of tweaking a turntable for specific discs and the following restoration is an art that requires subjective trade-offs - hiss vs. high end clarity is the most common. For digital stuff this would be good. |
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I have an 8" floppy disk somewhere. I gave it to my boss one day and said "Here's your monthly backup file. It's getting too big to fit on a regular floppy." |
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I will bun this only if it includes a quipu reader. |
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the local computer museum, has a service like this they say
they can get formats form old Apple, Atari, Amiga,
Commodore, Macintosh, Radio Shack, IMSAI, IBM, Next,
Mattel, Timex,Xerox, along with pc standard of all floppies
zip, hard drives,etc and then can ether rom image or
convert them and get them on usb. |
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[dev45] created an account in October of 2006, has annotated on approximately 93 ideas, and has one idea posted. |
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Try the newsgroup alt.folklore.computers . Several computer museum types hang out there. |
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Current threads include "How to kill a chicken with a computer", started in 1975. |
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