OK, and exactly how much old films have you seen? I see old films every day, it is my work. I have seen a loooooot of bad colors, believe me. ;)peaceman wrote:I wildly disagree. Kodachrome-I stock from 60+ years ago has not even lost 5% of its color if it was residing in metal cans. It most likely lasts another 60 years easily.
Not all films are kodachrome either. And I have seen bad kodachrome too (if it is from age or bad processing, or both old and badly processed I have no idea).
OK, now I know you have no idea what you are talking about.peaceman wrote:In 50 years, we might be a lot better with true archiving skills. Today, no archive medium introduced in the last 20 years lasted longer then a couple of years. Who can read my old Atari HD? Ever tried to copy a 5.25" floppy? Did you also do data backups on VHS tapes to regret it?
You can´t even compare the data-standards 20 years ago and the standards from today. And it would have been no problem to copy from a 5.25" floppy to a 3,5" floppy to a CD to a DVD and later to the next standard. If you do it before it is too late. ;)
VHS tapes? Goddamn right you need to make digital copies from your old VHS tapes! how long do you think those old magnetic tapes last, really? Tehy get old, picture turns bad, and if you don´t copy your VHS tapes... you will regret it.
The first? I have no idea, probably not.peaceman wrote:Or: Is the first CD you burnt on that $2000 dual-speed burner still readable? Really?
You are comparing the FIRST discs anyone ever could burn to the DVD discs of today? OK, sounds fair and like a good comparison... :roll: