yes, of course its always best to handle and store the
DVD discs carefully as possible, but my story of experiences with
hundreds of heavily scratched library ones ( which you edited out),
clearly demonstrates that they are not as fragile/
physically corruptible as most people would assume they are.
I was in disbelief myself when nearly all of these discs
were playable/readable. They were way beyond anything I had
ever seen in terms of the quantity and magnitude of scratches.
I wouldn't of posted that if I hadnt experienced it first hand
because it really is unbeliveable how much scratching is tolerated.... 
I am using about a 2 yr old sony DVD-video 5 disc player and dedicated
DVD-ROM only drive (samsung) in my PC during that time. Your mileage may
vary. Im sure some drives are better than others for scratch immunity...
jco

-----Original Message-----
From: Godfrey DiGiorgi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2006 7:58 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: And what about storing the CDs/DVDs?



On Jan 3, 2006, at 3:14 PM, Rob Studdert wrote:

>> ... DVDs in my experience are not realy that physicallly sensitive to 
>> dust ( can be wiped off) or even lots of light scratches. ...

I have seen plenty of cases where DVDs in particular do not play  
correctly due to scratching, less so for CD media, and this is for  
commercially produced CDs/DVDs, which are a lot more robust than CD-R  
and DVD-R media. Caution in handling and storage is always a good  
idea for sensitive data, whether you've had good or bad experience  
with the media. Multiple backups is always the safest course of action.

One of the advantages of large capacity hard disk storage is that  
very large libraries of data can be periodically checked and verified  
easily and quickly, without physically having to mount and dismount  
large numbers of devices. Handling is the biggest source of damage to  
any media, film included. Any open-to-the-air, interchangeable media  
device is, by its very nature, more prone to damage than a sealed  
hard disk's platters. Notwithstanding the frangibility of portable  
hard drive devices (where you've made a tradeoff in reliability/ 
durability for the advantage of portability) HDDs have significantly  
greater MTBF ratings compared to any floppy or other open-platter  
storage device.

Godfrey

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