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jor-el wrote:RAther than simply allowing that to happen, some method of collecting and storing the sum total of our knowledge is required. Moreover, a means to disseminate the information is needed.
spacetyrant wrote:jor-el wrote:RAther than simply allowing that to happen, some method of collecting and storing the sum total of our knowledge is required. Moreover, a means to disseminate the information is needed.
Peer-to-peer networking would seem to be the obvious solution. The best way to preserve knowledge would be to decentralize it -- the more copies of something in circulation, the less likely the loss of a central repository would result in knowledge loss. As a delivery/distribution mechanism, bittorrent is hard to beat, and data stored in the network cloud is pretty robust given the numerous copies available. Long term storage would be a concern. Magnetic and optical media aren't really long term solutions, as the former is subject to mechanical failure and the latter tends to degrade over time, but the emergence of solid-state drives might be an answer (they're pretty tough), and as it becomes more and more common for new PCs and laptops to feature SSD for storage, data stored on this medium will be more likely to survive the PAW.
The question remains on how to access all of this data in the PAW; access to electronic media will obviously be much more challenging. My thought is that short of an all-out nuclear exchange (in which case EMP would have destroyed most of the electronically stored data anyway), our technical deevolution won't happen overnight. A procedure would need to be established within this "grace period" while we still have access to electronically stored data, to get as much of it transcribed as possible to book/scroll form. Any surviving printers and photocopiers would of course be pressed into service for this purpose.
My 0.02.
SpaceTyrant
http://www.theendofthetunnel.org/Rush2112 wrote:TheLight is a pot-kicking man-ape gone wrong. But we still love him and his ability to carry entire trees at once.

jor-el wrote:spacetyrant wrote:jor-el wrote:RAther than simply allowing that to happen, some method of collecting and storing the sum total of our knowledge is required. Moreover, a means to disseminate the information is needed.
Peer-to-peer networking would seem to be the obvious solution. The best way to preserve knowledge would be to decentralize it -- the more copies of something in circulation, the less likely the loss of a central repository would result in knowledge loss. As a delivery/distribution mechanism, bittorrent is hard to beat, and data stored in the network cloud is pretty robust given the numerous copies available. Long term storage would be a concern. Magnetic and optical media aren't really long term solutions, as the former is subject to mechanical failure and the latter tends to degrade over time, but the emergence of solid-state drives might be an answer (they're pretty tough), and as it becomes more and more common for new PCs and laptops to feature SSD for storage, data stored on this medium will be more likely to survive the PAW.
The question remains on how to access all of this data in the PAW; access to electronic media will obviously be much more challenging. My thought is that short of an all-out nuclear exchange (in which case EMP would have destroyed most of the electronically stored data anyway), our technical deevolution won't happen overnight. A procedure would need to be established within this "grace period" while we still have access to electronically stored data, to get as much of it transcribed as possible to book/scroll form. Any surviving printers and photocopiers would of course be pressed into service for this purpose.
My 0.02.
SpaceTyrant
BTW, you know Demonoid is back up?
Books can be a part of the solution, but books can burn. For backup purposes they should also be scanned and composed into PDFs.
jor-el wrote:If you genuinely want civilization to fail go somewhere like DU.
jor-el wrote:Each time the technology changes, there's usually some process that would allow conversion of files to a new format. Someone would have to be around to bridge the gap.
Hatch wrote:I am not dead set against anything. I'm just pointing out the real challenges to electronic data storage for long term archival. You have to define a problem before you can develop the solution.
In my previous post I suggested several possible means of long term storage of electronic data.
The problem I see here is that you aren't seeing the scope of what you are proposing. You're talking about storing data in PDF on a hard drive and calling it Alexandria II. In 100 years, will PDF still be a readable format? Will the hard drive be able to be plugged into a computer to be read? Look how much computer hardware interfaces have changed in 20 years, and extrapolate the problem to 100 or 1000 years.
Say I discovered one of the first hard drives ever manufactured in the basement of a university, along with notes or documents to suggest that it contained valuable scientific research. First, no modern computer would have an interface to plug it in, so I'd have to build an interface adapter (provided I could find specs for the old interface) or I would have to cobble together scavenged antique computer hardware to read the disk.
Provided I can connect the disk and it spins up, I now have to read the data from it. If the documents were written in an antique proprietary format, that might be a big problem. And we're only talking about the span of decades here.
So I'm not naysaying just to aggravate, I'm trying to point out the real challenges to what you propose, so that real solutions might be discussed.
--Hatch


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