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Coders Edge

To Blue Ray or not to Blue Ray

Keeping Current

Every so often a technology falls out of vouge in the stores. That doesn't mean that it doesn't still work for everyone in their homes and offices. Or, increasingly now, in their cars or from their backpacks. DVD was a huge kick up from CD. Is Blue-ray that much of a kick up from DVD? Clearly for commercial content distributors Blue-ray is a format that makes sense for large format media. However, I am looking for long term. My goals are archival. And while I know that Blue-ray is the thing now, just as I knew that DVD was the thing then, I also know that Blue-ray will go the way of the DVD, the CD, the cassette tape, punch cards, paper tape, all things that I used to use or have to use to do my work (back in the day).

the evolution of storage media

It's just the evolution of storage media. The earliest known form wasn't used for computers. That was cuniform from Summaria where terms of contracts were written on clay slabs that were then sealed within a clay pocket that laid out, on the outer surface, the requirements of the folks involved if the contract was violated. Hence the term 'breaking the contract' because that resulted in the clay envelope being broken open to reveal the inner tablet one which are inscribe the consequences of the contract breech.

Large Content Entities (LCE's)

Large Content Entities (LCE's) are aggrigates of stored data in large hard-to-manage sizes, for example as large, or larger, than the storage media in common use. So, over time, the size of an LCE increases. And what used to be an LCE is now easily manageable. In the meantime the landscapes of data necessary, pools of sounds, forests of photographs, thousands of cell phone videos, all cateloged in a useful way . . . and useable for investigations of many kinds . . . these are the burdonsome LCE's that we can't easily get a handle on. (on which we can not get a handle). LCE are those entities which don't easily fit on the common media of the day. For example as large as the largest drive, and then make your entity bigger than that. Then you have an LCE that needs special attention. For me and LCE is my ocean of photographs. Also, I have LCE's of the audio transfer from cassette tape to digital audio for hundreds of hours of garage recordings from the last 25 years. Not anything that I share with the world yet. But I imagine that these will some day be making an appearance on this site and elsewhere on the web. Large Content Entities require significant thought and resource to save them and know where they are, that they are safe, that they are 'solid' and not prone to being lost. Other special requirements are that these entities can still be used for their intended purpose. For example a cartridge from an antique video game was a large content entity in it's day, but now it is flingable piece of floating river trash, of little or no use unless you have a game machine that takes that game. Uhh! Even if you can save that data you'd need a full-blown emulator and a system that is up-for-it to use those old cartridges. No creative person wants to archive their stuff onto media that will be obsolete in a few short years. Large Content Entities are a chore to archive because LCE's need to exist in a format that allows for the user to have them to use when he/she needs to (use them). And those who seek to save and archive their work which involves the creation of LCE's, those folks need to have a back-up and archive policy. For example when a muscian lays down multiple tracks, or a band does, the data produced is stored within a well-thought-out scheme. The scheme is designed to allow for the user to back-up. The scheme, as well, feeds the data to the software about the project, loads the various audio tracks and video clips that make up the material. Has a save of a mixdown session with varying levels of mix for different tracks. Has various versions of mixed down audio in various formats for use for what ever purpose is desired (sound track for something, ring tone for something else, audio clip for use on a social media page, practice tape to send to auditioning muscians who will collaborate. As an example imagine a film destributed on a 25 gig Blueray disk. There must be much more than 25 gigs of data associated with the movie. All of that data could be considered a Large Content Entity. And so, we see, that LCE are also aggrigates of LCE. For a major production there are likely multiple LCE's. How do the producers and creative talent sort through it all? How do investors get assured that the material is being handled properly and properly archived? This is new ground for all involved. Most likely these folks have large array storage of some kind or another. They probably have multi-Tetra byte backup servers and a full-time IT department to care and feed this beast.

my current strategy for storing Large Content Entities (LCE's)

A harddrive stores so much more for my archive. I just need to know that I have multiple copies. And so, for that 150 gigs of transfered audio (my own stuff) It makes more sense to just copy the whole damn thing over to a second harddrive than to run out and buy a Blue-ray burner that will be obsolete next year. I'm waiting for the price of 32 gig flash to be low and then I will use that do backups as well. And for physical backups I have been using flash on LCE's of about 1 gig. So, now, Blueray? for backup? 25 gig is just not that high an amount of space for me to want to move all backup to Blueray. If I did that then I would have to make sure that I have a working Blueray for system on which I seek to load the LCE's that I have backed up. That I buy in the future and it won't work on a hand-held or mobile device but I'm pretty sure that the flash, because everyone is using it, is the thing. Blueray is a good choice for copyright holders now who want to do wide scale distribution of their coaster media for the temporary spur of the moment throw-away media. Watch once and then it's a coaster kind of media. But for archives I'd think to use something that doesn't drop bits when it gets scratched. Or if it's cold and the disc gets mist on it because it is put into a warm damp environment and drops data like that too. Blueray will soon go the way of the DVD. It will be around for a while and then it will be seen as a novelty. My take on things is that flash is the clear winner in the storage wars. Oh, ya, you can use 'the cloud', which is probably propriatory and not what you want to do with such large amounts of data. And if you do use cloud storage I'd gzip and tar it up with a secure password so that you stuff isn't out there for the world to see. You can believe whatever marketting folks tell you if you want to. But if you store your data out on a cloud you can be assured that there will be people trying to steal it. And they might not be able to do it, but if it's there they will try. When your data and backup is in a safe in a secure location you don't need to do this. but if you are doing creative things like music and video production you kind of want to know that your data is secure and that the data is archived properly. For creative folks who make small packets of media, say all the data from an audio recording session, they want to have the data in a way that it will be useful for all the members of the team that needs it. And a band or movie might want to have some leaks as a way to generate buzz and interest in their project. It might make great sense to use a cloud as an alternative backup methodology. You put your songs out in the cloud and you let the storage company handle distribution of your copyrighted work. Seems like a data model to me and essentially that is what you-tube and folks like that are doing.

Content Management

Content management is a difficult thing to get right. You need to own your content or you will be trivialized in the future as the 'look and feel' becomes more and more customized. A good thing to thing about when considering content managment methodologies is that you ought to consider the special uses of your content, what you think of as special uses. For example if you have a musical site don't you care more what it sounds like?

How do the blind use a photo site? How do the deaf use a music site?

So think about how a blind person would use your music site. How does a deaf person use a music site? Is it so outragous to think that a person who is totally deaf might want to learn about music by going to a music website? And even though that person won't be listening to the music he/she might pipe the music into software that produces graphical effects just so that they can experience the music through the flashing of colors on a screen. Or pipe it into a shake- table so that they can feel that bass. Or they may want to watch a virtuouso in closeup (how their hands and fingers move) to try and comprehend the hypnotic quality of music so they need a video feed. And a blind person might be very interested in hearing descriptions of the photos that are content on a site. Have you accomodated these folks by cateloging your content in a way that is useful for them? Don't just do this because of the fear of litigious busy-body lawyers. But someone might think of that as a business model. Are you prepared? Does your site have those alternative uses as an option?

anticipate and plan for unintended uses of your content

Content can be used in ways that you least expect. So content managment would have to include a way for folks to get and use your content regardless of how marketting and layout think that it should be used.

One space or two

Recently there has been a push by layout and typesetting graphic art mavens that says that anyone who uses two spaces at the end of a sentance, as we were all taught to do in typing class, is somehow evil. And they won't compromise on this. I see their point in the sense of laying out the type on a page. But I don't see why there is such a high level of vitrol from folks who only want to see one space. Basically anyone who does the two space thing is someone who has been doing it for years and is probably doing it without thinking about it. So if anyone gets copy that has two spaces after the every period than it is simple enough for the layout software to filter this out. You globally replace '. ' with '. ' What will this change in your document? Might change something unexpected. You may need to then send the document out for proofing. But you were going to do that anyway, weren't you? So all of you who rave about one space = good and two spaces = evil get over yourselves. It really is just a subtle form of age descrimination. All you who get all worked up over the end of sentance spaces here is a point: the pay you as a layout artist for their content. One space, two space, red state, blue state, what does it matter to your client, the professor or lawyer or politician or creative person who provides the content for you if you layout with two or one spaces? The layout is a separate thing anyway, and, as you know, it really is a different thing than creating a book length manuscript. So, if the person persist in their two space thing then just write a rule for your layout that always finds that extra space and then interprets it, for the purpose of your layout, as a superfilous space. It is superfilous and it thus can be elliminated and that decision was made by you so that you can get paid the big bucks by being such a genius. Another note on this issue: one space, two space, red state, blue state. Suppose that there were seemingly random use of one space or two space. It could be some hidden code that some spy or security maven has put into the document unbeknownst to you. Last thing on this: I have modified my typing so that I only use one space at the end of a sentance. It means less typing so I guess that is a good thing. WP March 28, 2011 My content presented for the mobile user: Message Mobile Right Column Mobile Left Column Mobile Poem Shards Mobile Coder's Edge Mobile

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