For a quick Friday afternoon response:

There has been some discussion on this from time to time.
In one respect it boils down to this:

You can do the research on media and how long it lasts etc.etc.
But, the main point of having long term stuff is being able at some
future point, to retrieve and reliably interpret the date i.e. make reports
or just printout som of the data.

As I heard some state recently, "If i gave you a WordPerfect 1.0 document
og 8 inch floppy, what would you do with it?  Do you still have OS and
App program to enable you to read it?"

Could you read anything that was stored 30 years ago - today?

The conclusion seems to be for LONG TERM stuff, store in some
text or generic format - not Oracle DB's etc. Use good media but have 
a way to rotate stored data to new technology at some regular interval - 
5, 7, 10 years.  Keep at least 2 copies in different physical locations.

Well, that's enough for now.




David B. Longo
System Administrator
Health First, Inc.
3300 Fiske Blvd.
Rockledge, FL 32955-4305
PH      321.434.5536
Pager  321.634.8230
Fax:    321.434.5525
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 03/15/02 04:11PM >>>
*SMers..

In the very near future I will need to put together a software and hardware
proposal for data retention  of approximately 50 years due to FDA
regulations encompassing the medical industry.

My main question would be the type of media to use currently that has any
kind of magneto retention life-span nearing or surpassing this.

If there are any *SM colleagues out there that are in this situation, I
would really appreciate either some feedback on this board, some direct
feedback via email or even a discussion over the phone.

I thank you all in advance.

Stu Ward
wards@<nospam>bmcmask.com



"MMS <health-first.org>" made the following
 annotations on 03/15/02 17:02:02
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