NDSA:Standards and Best Practices Working Group/Optical MeetingNotes/Passmore: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 14:20, 11 February 2016
- John Passmore (WNYC) @WNYCarchives
- 30,000 CD-DA - CD-Rs with encoded audio
- Created in early 2000s by WNYC staff
- Considered preservation masters for that era
- Group of CDs were made using same machines, same brands of discs, so in a sense a control group
- CDs function as material for the reference library for a long time - Librarians noticed that pulling CDs some were not playing, ripping properly, determined a need to get data off of the CDs ASAP, purchased equipment and made a RIP station.
- Ripped about 8k CDs, dumping wav files at digital asset management station, cataloging.
- First wanted to test some to learn about increase in errors and condition of collection.
- Plextor drives used.
- Large spectrum of discs regardless of year they were from and different levels of accessibility.
- 2400 Mitsui silver CD-Rs
- 20% of silver cds measuring previously detectable errors
- None passed IASA’s specs for errors - technicians instead looking for what CD is getting kicked out and why.
- Not gradual increase based on date - totally random variables
- Conclusion: CD-DAs don’t last long and are unpredictable, accelerating aging only part of issues with optical media - hardware to make data, care and handling etc.
- More open source solutions would be great to use with hardware that exists
- Contact John Passmore at WNYC: jpassmore@nypublicradio.org