We labor under an illusion if we assume our present age will be better remembered than antiquity. The average life expectancy of magnetic tapes, audio or video, is only 10 years; of optical disks, 5o; of archival quality microfilm, but a 100. In fact, average-quality CD-ROMs become unreadable or unreliable after only five years. Advances in technology, moreover, make older computer hardware and software obsolete; and as they grow obsolete, their data becomes unintelligible. Meanwhile, the film that recorded the images of the past is already crumbling; according to UNESCO, "three-quarters of the films which were made worldwide before 1950 have already disappeared." Thus our so-called Age of Information may be known to the future as an age of missing information.
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Digital Death
Writing about art and immortality in his book, Ancient Mesopotamia, Stephen Bertman writes:
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1 comment:
What does Bertman know--he's the guy who caught that foul pop and ruined the Cubs' chances at the World Series a few years back.
Oh, that's Bartman. Good thing we have Wikipedia...but for how long?
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