On Monday 19 February 2007 12:55, Carlos E. R. wrote:
> The Monday 2007-02-19 at 11:32 -0500, Greg Freemyer wrote:
> > AIUI, it relates to designed life of the media.  For most CDs/DVDs it
> > is pretty short (a year or two I think. And the glue from the back of
> > the label will eat away your data.  Don't use them.)
>
> The initial designed life was ethernal. A century at least. Actual life
> expectancy after "improvements" is much lower. Well, maybe I'm thinking of
> CDs.
>
> > Check these out: http://www.kmpmedia.com/kodak-gold.html
> >
> > That should be long enough for you (rated 100 to 300 years).
> >
> > FYI: I was curious about the cost. $122 for 100-pack at
> > http://www.datamediastore.com/kodak-cd-r-29150.html.
>
> I wonder if there are more makers claiming similar durability?
>
> --
> Cheers,
>        Carlos E. R.

Over many years, I have always found Kodak to be a very reliable outfit.  What 
they say, they mean.  If they promise 100 years minimum, I would take their 
word.  I do not know of too many companies that I would take the word of.  
The difficulty with Kodak, is that if they are not selling a lot of the 
product, it's deleted, so if you decide on this media, you might want to 
consider getting enough to last for a while.  At least until something better 
comes along--which it will, of course.

--doug

--doug
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