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Re: [ARSCLIST] Fw: [ARSCLIST] Gold CDs



Hi, Peter,

It seems to me the expressions need to reflect (wrong word?) the degree of
assumed average longevity.

Longevity is playback using the error correction system of the day, which
means the chip has to be identified.  There need to be a list of CD players
grouped by error correction systems, contunually updated.

New and better(?) error correction systems should be identified as they
appear and players using them should be reviewed.  A standard test disc
should be created with a variety of errors and run through successive
playback machines, toward the idea that, with these problems, it won't
playback on this one but will on that one.

Of course, test figures with no error correction system in place heads the
list.

Average longevity assumes proper storage and might be expressed in dd's,
death dates, as in 40 years plus or minus 5 years.  Some PR guy can come up
with a more genteel way of expressing this.

Assumed average longevity.  Assumed implies that this number is an
extrapolation rather than a figure arrived at by waiting 40 years.  It
supplies cover in the event of CD sticky shed.

Any test results must take into account the various methods of labeling as
well as the disc surface type, each combination treated separately.
Otherwise, results will be unrelated to real-world uses.

Steve Smolian


----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, September 24, 2004 1:41 PM Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Fw: [ARSCLIST] Gold CDs


-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Joe_Iraci@xxxxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, September 24, 2004 1:54 PM
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Fw: [ARSCLIST] Gold CDs


"... and, most significantly, on storage and handling."


Storage and handling, of course are major elements in any longevity
discussion.

"For example, if there were standards by which the term "archival" was
defined and enforced,
then one or more lines of blanks labelled "archival" could be used."

Archival is a tricky word and can mean different things to different
people.
Joe


NIST just put a good document on storage and handling and the AES/ISO
Joint
Technical Commission is currently working on a Optical Disc storage and
handling document.

As far as "archival" is concerned, on the Joint Commission, we've been
trying to do something about putting a reasonable definition in the "Terms
and Definitions" section of a number of AES, ANSI and ISO standards
documents for years.  Unfortunately, the response we've gotten has not
been
promising.  Trying to define "archival" at this point impacts too many
previously published documents and , frankly, has too many political
ramifications in the industry for a "formal" definition to pass the
standards voting process any time in the near future.  This is why we have
had to make do with phrases such as "medium-term life expectancy" and
"extended-term life expectancy".  You might notice that these phrases
don't
seem to have been picked up in advertising literature.  Oh well, a
consensus
on what archival means when referring to media would be really nice and
I'm
certainly open to any suggestions on how we all could get such a
definition
into a published standard.  Any ideas?


Peter Brothers President SPECS BROS., LLC (201) 440-6589 www.specsbros.com

Restoration and Disaster Recovery Service Since 1983



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