Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Is it really worth buying CDs?
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rkyburz
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I would caution about totally relying on RAID 5, etc.
It is security against any one HDD in the array failing but it doesn't help if the NAS device fails (as it will do eventually) or if there is burglary or fire (rkyburz wisely has a backup on another HDD).
I don't bother with RAID, instead I periodically mirror the data onto external HDDs (using Beyond Compare).
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scottycelt
I rarely buy CDs these days. Like others here I have everything now on computer which is so much quicker and more convenient. I do miss the old LPs and covers though ... there was a sense of owning something of real value then, a sense I never quite developed with the advent of CDs
For a computer backup I suggest double-sided DVDs which can hold a whopping 8.5gb of stuff (perfect for endlessly repetitive, version-collecting Brucknerians). These can be purchased quite cheaply now in places like T***o ...
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostI rarely buy CDs these days. Like others here I have everything now on computer which is so much quicker and more convenient. I do miss the old LPs and covers though ... there was a sense of owning something of real value then, a sense I never quite developed with the advent of CDs
For a computer backup I suggest double-sided DVDs which can hold a whopping 8.5gb of stuff (perfect for endlessly repetitive, version-collecting Brucknerians). These can be purchased quite cheaply now in places like T***o ...
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI suspect it's not an exact science (technopeasant here) but how many CDs does this equate to, please?
Personally I back up to a second hard drive rather than optical media.Steve
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Bryn View PostBetween a third and half of what you could get on a single layer Blu-ray disc.
To answer Ams's query it obviously depends on the contents of the CD and what quality of sound you are happy with when ripping from that CD, as to how many you can fit onto 8.5 gb ?
An external HD is an obvious alternative, of course, and for those with very large collections it is clearly the tidier option.
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rkyburz
Originally posted by scottycelt View Post(...)
For a computer backup I suggest double-sided DVDs which can hold a whopping 8.5gb of stuff (perfect for endlessly repetitive, version-collecting Brucknerians). These can be purchased quite cheaply now in places like T***o ...
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Originally posted by rkyburz View Post...and with this, the effective capacity of a single-sided DVD (4.7 GB) is about that of 2 CDs (800 MB each) ... ;-)Steve
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I really don't like the idea of totally relying on DVDs or for backups, though DVD-RAM discs are allegedly more reliable.
As far as I am concerned the only sensible method is to use an external hard drive. It is also much quicker and gives easy access. You can also use software to mirror all or part of your PC's hard drive to an external HDD, making the process semi-automatic.
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Originally posted by rkyburz View PostEven if you just use single-sided optical, writable media, and even if you are careful not to use felt pens, sticky labels, etc. to label the discs: writable optical media have a *very* finite lifetime — I would not count on such media to last more than a couple years; if this is your backup, then you want to make 2, better 3 copies — and with this, the effective capacity of a single-sided DVD (4.7 GB) is about that of 2 CDs (800 MB each) ... ;-)
Currently spinning here, Amanda Hurton's The Garden Bench (for 2 vibraphones), composed when she was a 14 year old student of John White, recorded in concert in November 1977, digitized and burned onto a cheap Samsung aluminium reflective layered CD-R in November 1998. No hint of a glitch throughout the disc (which also includes works by John White, Gavin Bryars and Dave Smith).
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rkyburz
Sure, there will be discs holding 50 years, and some types are better than others — but just picture a collector with shelves full of self-burned optical media, written, say, over 20 years, and then you eventually run into *one* that fails: I would not want to be in that person's shoes ...
I'm not opposed to using CD-Rs — I use them myself for downloaded music, as I like to have a hard copy — but *not* as the sole backup!
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Cheapskater
Originally posted by johnb View Post
As far as I am concerned the only sensible method is to use an external hard drive. It is also much quicker and gives easy access. You can also use software to mirror all or part of your PC's hard drive to an external HDD, making the process semi-automatic.
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I know almost nothing about optical media, computers etc (when I was at university the computer was the size of a garden shed - an Elliot 803 if memory serves). Over more than 25 years I have never had a commercial cd fail. Presumably these are superior (and the blanks much more expensive) to those one burns oneself?
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