Government Information Preservation Working Group

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Fred Byers NIST 1 Government Information Government Information Preservation Working Preservation Working Group Group December 16, 2003

description

Government Information Preservation Working Group. December 16, 2003. Obsolete and Endangered Tapes Source: 2003 Cornell University Library, Digital Preservation Management. 1/2" 9-track Reel Storage capacity: Standard bpi recording densities of 800-6250bpi. It is estimated that over 90% - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Government Information Preservation Working Group

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Government Information Government Information Preservation Working GroupPreservation Working Group

December 16, 2003

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Obsolete and Endangered TapesObsolete and Endangered TapesSource: 2003 Cornell University Library, Digital Preservation ManagementSource: 2003 Cornell University Library, Digital Preservation Management

4mm DAT (TDK DC4-120 DDS2)Storage capacity: 1 - 4 GBApproximate dates in use: 1993- present

Fujifilm DLTtape III XTStorage capacity: 15GApproximate dates in use: 1994-present

4mm DAT (Verbatim DDS3 125M)Storage capacity: 12 GBApproximate dates in use: 1996- present

DC9135 QIC tape 1/4"Storage capacity: 1.35GApproximate dates in use: 1990-1995

G2000 (DC2000 compatible) Storage capacity: 40MbApproximate dates in use: 1990-1995

Sony 8mm data cartridge QG-112MStorage capacity: 2.5-5GBApproximate dates in use: 1990-present

Fujifilm DG-90M DDS cartridgeStorage capacity: 2.0 GBApproximate dates in use: 1993-present

DC6150 QIC-150Storage capacity: 150MbApproximate dates in use: 1990-1995

DC600A QIC-24Storage capacity: 60MbApproximate dates in use: 1990-1995

IBM 3480 cartridgeStorage capacity: 200MbApproximate dates in use: 1984-1994

1/2" 9-track ReelStorage capacity: Standard bpi recording densities of 800-6250bpi.It is estimated that over 90% of the world's data mine is still held on 9-Track

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Obsolete and Endangered DisksObsolete and Endangered Disks Source: 2003 Cornell University Library, Digital Preservation Management Source: 2003 Cornell University Library, Digital Preservation Management

8" floppy disk  (Radio Shack TRS80 Model II ) Storage capacity: 509,184 bytesApproximate dates in use: Late 1971-1981

5.25" floppy diskStorage capacity: 100KB-1.2MBApproximate dates in use: 1972-mid1980s

3 1/2" diskStorage capacity: 400K to 2.8 MBApproximate dates in use: 1982-present

Sony 12" Magneto Optical Disk (WDM-3DL0)Storage capacity: 3.2G Double-sided(WORM) Approximate dates in use: 1985-1992

Sony Magneto Optical Disk EDM-600BStorage capacity: 600MbDual-Sided rewritableApproximate dates in use:

Iomega 100 Zip disk Storage capacity: 100Mb Approximate dates in use: 1995-present

CD-ROM disc Storage capacity: 650MbApproximate dates in use: 1984-present

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User-Removable User-Removable Digital Storage Media TimelineDigital Storage Media Timeline

Paper Magnetic Magnetic Magnetic Optical Optical Optical ???

(Infrared (Red (Blue/Violet Laser) Laser) Laser)

Punch Cassette 5 Floppy 3.5” Floppy CD DVD **

Card Tape Disk Disk Disc Disc Disc ???

l______________________l_____________________l_____________________l________________________l__

1970 1980 1990 2000 2005+? Future

** Blu-Ray Disc, Advanced Optical Disc, or other.

 

Timeline illustrates the changes in common “removable” storage media Source: Technical Advisory Service for Images (TASI) 2002, extended

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Digital Preservation OptionsDigital Preservation Options Duplication (tape to tape) Media migration (tape to disc, disc to tape) Digital encoding format (old-to-new) Emulation (simulation of previous software) Hardware/software and OS preservation Outsourcing Wait and see, deal with it later Convert to analog (i.e. print documents,

microfilm)

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Selecting Storage Media for Long-Term Preservation

An example scorecard, comparing some common media types

1 (does not meet the criterion) to 3 (fully meets the criterion). As a general rule, no medium which scores less than 12 should be considered.

Media CD-R DVD-R Zip Disk 3.5” Magnetic Disk DLT DAT Longevity 3 3 1 1 2 1 Capacity 2 2 1 1 3 3 Viability 2 2 1 1 3 3 Obsolescence 3 2 2 3 2 2 Cost 3 2 1 1 3 3 Susceptibility 3 3 1 1 3 2

Total 16 14 7 8 16 14

Source: THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES, Digital Preservation Guidance Note 2: Selecting storage media for long-term preservation, June 19, 2003. http://www.pro.gov.uk/about/preservation/digital/guidance/selecting-storage-media.pdf

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Digital PreservationDigital PreservationStrategy

Preserve what?

To what?

Now what?

Future access

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Considering CDs, DVDs?Considering CDs, DVDs?

What’s to consider?

Life expectancy Quality variations Interoperability/compatibility Robustness

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Factors that affect Disc LEFactors that affect Disc LE

TypeManufacturing qualityCondition of the disc before recordingQuality of the disc recordingHandling and maintenanceEnvironmental conditions

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Maximizing Disc UsefulnessMaximizing Disc Usefulness

Care and Handling– Consider environmental influences– Physical handling– Storage conditions– Labeling– Cleaning

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CD, DVD LandscapeCD, DVD LandscapeCD

CD-R, CD-RW, VCD

CD-ROMCD-DA, CD-I, CD+G,

DVDDVD-R General,

DVD-R Authoring,

DVD-RW,

DVD+R, DVD+RW,

DVD-ROM DVD-Video

DVD-Audio

DVD-RAM,

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CD vs DVD ConstructionCD vs DVD Construction

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Double-Sided DVDsDouble-Sided DVDs

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Care and Handling Care and Handling of CDs and DVDsof CDs and DVDs

A Guide for Librarians and Archivists

Co-Published by NIST and CLIR

NIST Publicationhttp://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/carefordisc/CDandDVDCareandHandlingGuide.pdf

One-Page Reference from the Guidehttp://www.itl.nist.gov/div895/carefordisc/onepage.pdf

CLIR Publicationhttp://www.clir.org/pubs/abstract/pub121abst.html