[Tig] Holographic Drive at NAB
Jeff Heusser
lists at neonmargarita.com
Mon Apr 21 11:49:14 PDT 2008
I'd argue the need of museums is of course huge but the average human
with music, photos, movies, etc is also a prime market for a cheap,
reliable option for archival. Huge money to be made in the consumer
as well as professional areas.
Jeff
---
Jeff Heusser
neonmargarita.com jeff at neonmargarita.com
fxguide.com fxphd.com
On Apr 21, 2008, at 11:40 AM, Rob Lingelbach wrote:
> 1826 subscribers as of April 2008
> Gary Adams supports the TIG
> http://colorist.org/wiki3/index.php/TIGNABFS08
> ====
>
>
>
> On Apr 21, 2008, at 9:26 PM, Bob Friesenhahn wrote:
>
>> if a work is saved twice to two different media, then if both copies
>> of the media decay, then it is important that the summation of the
>> two
>> can be used to re-create the original, and the user is not faced with
>> both copies simply failing due to a "read error". This implies that
>> we need a sort of RAID designed to be used with redundant removable
>> media.
>
>
> There must be people working on this, at the least drawing up some
> standards, at the major film archives around the world, and I can
> think of two in the US that should be intimately involved: The Library
> of Congress and the UCLA Film Archives (the 2 biggest in the
> States). Is anyone here on the TIG free to comment on the current
> situation for archiving, or the future-current, tidal current, or
> incipient tsunami of archiving technology?
>
> --
> Rob Lingelbach
> rob at colorist.org http://www.colorist.org/robhome.html
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> No personal abuse; absolutely no advertising or marketing on the
> main TIG mailinglist. Emergency
> tig contact address is rob (at) calarts.edu
> Tig mailing list
> Tig at tig.colorist.org
> http://tig.colorist.org/mailman/listinfo/tig
More information about the Tig
mailing list