Moby
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 60
- Location
- Orlando, Fla.
I'll bet every one of us has a box of old family photographs somewhere. Once in a while I pull out my box of photos and look at them for the memories. And it's not just for the content of the images. It's also the fact that these photographs themselves are actual keepsakes handed down to us by long gone loved ones.
Now with the advent of digital cameras and video recorders all these images only exist as ones and zeroes on a magnetic storage medium like a floppy. a hard drive or a CD. I know you can have prints made from digital pictures but usually we only select a few of the best ones to print out. The more zany or interesting ones don't get printed or even worse, they are deleted.
Another problem exists. Photographs on paper can last for 100 years. We have old 8mm home movies that are 50 years old. How long can we expect digitally store images to last? Also think of all the obsolete storage formats like the original floppies, small floppies and obsolete hard drives that contain images that we can't even access anymore?
You can't just toss your obsolete floppies, hard drives, memory sticks and Cd's in a box and expect that your Grandkids will be able to look at them in the future. What will our Grandkids have to bring back the memories if they don't have the traditional family album?
Now with the advent of digital cameras and video recorders all these images only exist as ones and zeroes on a magnetic storage medium like a floppy. a hard drive or a CD. I know you can have prints made from digital pictures but usually we only select a few of the best ones to print out. The more zany or interesting ones don't get printed or even worse, they are deleted.
Another problem exists. Photographs on paper can last for 100 years. We have old 8mm home movies that are 50 years old. How long can we expect digitally store images to last? Also think of all the obsolete storage formats like the original floppies, small floppies and obsolete hard drives that contain images that we can't even access anymore?
You can't just toss your obsolete floppies, hard drives, memory sticks and Cd's in a box and expect that your Grandkids will be able to look at them in the future. What will our Grandkids have to bring back the memories if they don't have the traditional family album?