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Re: [ARSCLIST] Format conundrum



steven austin wrote:
> Just a thought:
>
> Does anyone make digital audio copies from their archival sound sources,
> then store the data as code printouts? Cards, paper, whatever?
>
> I would think with digital information technology, we don't really need
> to rely on tape or laser-encoded discs for archival storage when it
> would be so much more efficient to store the information as digital
> code, ready at any time to be translated through software into audio
> sound. A hard copy of the code would avoid the degradation that all
> storage media suffer and always offer a first-generation master of the
> original source recovery, where a CD-R or a tape would be subject to the
> condition of the transport media.
>
> Know what I mean?
>
> Steven Austin
>

I've played around with a sci-fi story about this kind of thing.  I
imagine a future where there are no more computers, but reams and reams
of printed code spat out in the last days before the machines stopped.
In the far-flung days long after the cataclysm, a special group of
scholars, the digital-crypto-paleographers, have been trained using the
Rosetta stone of the period (a stack of accidentally preserved "For
Dummies" books) to draw meaning from these lines and lines of digits.

In his monk-like cell, our scholar-hero, 47B-Ylba-C, pours over pages
and pages of code by the light of a glowing fungus.  After a lifetime of
combing over a document determined to be from a single cohesive unit of
knowledge, 47B-Ylba-C has his eureka moment: "Aha!" he says, "The
ancients were wise to cleverly convolute their secrets!" He breathes
deeply and cries out through the open doorway, "Brothers!  Sisters! I
have broken the code, that terrible, difficult, once-thought
impenetrable code that we have determined protects that most valuable
and secret of ancient knowledge!"  He pauses before the gathered throng
to flex his outstretched fingers in the ritual motions of the ancient
Code Generators.  His fellow scholars flex in return.  "I have
vindicated the memory of the great scholar 7-Tubar-X founder of our
sect!" A gasp erupts from the collected throng who begin to madly flex
their outstretched fingers in excitement.   "I have penetrated that most
puzzling of the ancient cryptograms!" He pauses for emphasis.  "Yes my
brethren, I have unlocked the secret to ATRAC!" Astonished gasps and
cries of joy fill the chamber.  He glances about the room with his eyes
afire.  "Behold! No more shall the most occult secrets of the greatest
of the ancient wise-priestess seers be kept from us!  No more will we be
locked out of the wisdom of Brittney Spears!"


-- ********************************* Andy Kolovos Archivist/Folklorist Vermont Folklife Center P.O. Box 442 Middlebury, VT 05753 (802) 388-4964 akolovos @ vermontfolklifecenter.org http://www.vermontfolklifecenter.org


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