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Not only are WD and Seagate lowering the quality, they were doing so while not informing customers last year. They started using SMR(shingled magnetic recording) in high end drives without mentioning it. SMR is slower but makes increasing the storage capacity easier. This is fine in consumer grade drives. Not in stuff like WD Red.I used to think I would just use all the shit I got in DVDRs and my HDDs but nowadays most PCs and laptop dont even come with optical drives, and discs from the 90's and early 00s are already rotting which is some really bad sign
Also HDDs are getting shittier and more failure prone every year because the entire industry is just WD and seagate and they want to sell you more shit disks not protect your data. Also SSDs dont last long, and lose data when unpowered for a long time.
So not looking good unless you're a richfag with tons of LTO storage
Well, this brings up a question of its own - I see that this software is based on Debian and still being constantly patched.
How safe would any modern software be after the downfall of the internet, given how bug-riddled it is and our current dependence on constant patching? 10 years later, would it be like an entire planet of Windows XP machines?
I think we should be looking into minimal, bulletproof software systems. Something where you can "set it and forget it" for 10, 20 years, modulo hardware maintenance.
How do you shop? Amazon is now out of the picture, after they drove physical stores out of business. There will be a gold rush as businesses try to fill that void. Similarly, advertising will have a huge boom, because people will actually need it - they'll legitimately be in need of information on what goods can be gotten where.
I used to think I would just use all the shit I got in DVDRs and my HDDs but nowadays most PCs and laptop dont even come with optical drives, and discs from the 90's and early 00s are already rotting which is some really bad sign
Suggestions for technology that could be used in the event the Internet went away for any reason.
Disc rot seems to be mostly a meme in my experience. To hear some people talk, you'd think every CD would be a heap of dust by now, and every CD-RW would be a mist of subatomic particles.I know DVD-R's and CD-R's have official shelf lives but I have CD-R's I burned around 20 years ago that still read just fine, not that I haven't backed up anything on CD-R worth saving.
It would be hilarious in some sort of subversive anti-art way to make an old 1900s-style Sears-Roebuck catalogue, except based on Amazon's current selection of chinesium.Perhaps there would be an Amazon Catalogue? Rural towns, at least in Canada, used to have Sears Catalogue counters where you'd place an order for an item and a truck would drop it off in a couple of weeks and then you'd pick it up or have it delivered.
Disc rot seems to be mostly a meme in my experience. To hear some people talk, you'd think every CD would be a heap of dust by now, and every CD-RW would be a mist of subatomic particles.
Mechanical hard drives, on the other hand, I don't trust at all.
I find certain types of jewel case are best about protecting discs, better than slips/sleeves, but nothing is a perfect solution to that problem (that I know of)I don't deny that disk rot is a thing that happens but, aside from Laserdiscs, most optical disks I have that are no longer readable became that way due to physical damage (i.e. scratches, bending them, or accidentally crushing them with the wheels on my desk chair) with only a handful of disks that I know of succumbing to disk rot. For one of the DVDs I had that actually did get disk rot, it was evident that there was a manufacturing defect with the disk pretty early on due to a coffee ring-like ring around the rim.
I find certain types of jewel case are best about protecting discs, better than slips/sleeves, but nothing is a perfect solution to that problem (that I know of)
All my important stuff is on M-Disc or BluRay. And I autisticly horded burners that supported lightscribe and M-Disc as my employer was filling dumpers with PC's the last few upgrade cycles.I don't deny that disk rot is a thing that happens but, aside from Laserdiscs, most optical disks I have that are no longer readable became that way due to physical damage (i.e. scratches, bending them, or accidentally crushing them with the wheels on my desk chair) with only a handful of disks that I know of succumbing to disk rot. For one of the DVDs I had that actually did get disk rot, it was evident that there was a manufacturing defect with the disk pretty early on due to a coffee ring-like ring around the rim.
When I see people mention packet radio as an internet replacement I often wonder if they understand how slow AX.25 over 1200 & 300 baud half duplex really is. During the peak of it's popularity the text of this post might have taken a few minutes to get through a busy digipeater. Its very cool tech (I still play on Network105 with a real TNC) but it capabilities are basically limited to passing(store and forward) ASCII text messages only. Digitpeating anything interactive or in real time is pure torture. Especially when there is more then 1 user. Timeshare+half duplex on every hopDo we have packet radio?
What's the better HDD company that's not Seagate or Western Digital? I know Toshiba and some other companies make Hard Drives, what's the better company than for anyone who has expierence with those drives?Not only are WD and Seagate lowering the quality, they were doing so while not informing customers last year. They started using SMR(shingled magnetic recording) in high end drives without mentioning it. SMR is slower but makes increasing the storage capacity easier. This is fine in consumer grade drives. Not in stuff like WD Red.
Toshiba seems to always do good on the blackblaze reports. Blackblaze is a data center that makes public their hard drive reports.What's the better HDD company that's not Seagate or Western Digital? I know Toshiba and some other companies make Hard Drives, what's the better company than for anyone who has expierence with those drives?
Those offline viewers look interesting, might be worth checking out.you can download and mirror wikipedia if you want
That all depends on how they are stored and how much use they have taken. My laser disc collection is still good after 35 years of use. My lead Zepplin Laser disc and Star trek Animated version are as pristine as I have purchased them.and discs from the 90's and early 00s are already rotting which is some really bad sign
I've taken the question to go one of three ways:If an EMP destroyed the internet, then like OP said, tech goes back several decades. We'll make it, but a lot of folks will die either from the chaos that insues or relying on tech to keep em alive.
If its like that one South Park episode were the internet just stops working, I'll be fine. I've got a ton of media, physical and digital to keep me occupied for a long time. Assuming power doesn't go out as well.