This guy should get the Medal of Honor and the Presidential medal of freedom.
@bowlosoggycereal81353 жыл бұрын
Yea it would also be wild if he got the ACM Alan M. Turing award
@dbfisher9 жыл бұрын
I think we also have to think about the threat of electro magnetic pulse (EMP) from either warfare or solar storms and the potential for erasing or jumbling data stored in magnetic form.
@jasonlewis4604 жыл бұрын
We will be storing data on crystals very soon.
@danoobrien44105 ай бұрын
Keep the data moving, the previous vessel can physically rot away after you move it to a new medium.
@nnov_tech_chan7891 Жыл бұрын
True hackers use paper to store things
@TheTastefulThickness9 ай бұрын
I do
@qwertyasdfg778211 ай бұрын
so they dont have facilities to preserve this things?
@schok513 ай бұрын
There are archival institutions, but they're limited in numbers, physical space, funding. And that doesn't address the issue of non-documented/unspecified and non-open data formats, such as data files that can only be used through a proprietary implementation of some software in some specific technological context (hardware specific, or OS specific).
@engineeredarmy11523 жыл бұрын
9.7k views for this? Wow
@MargotHypnos2 жыл бұрын
my university lecturer is making me watch this!!!!!!!!!!!
@campbellsmith9849 Жыл бұрын
idk i feel like something like a .wav file could be read 1000 years from now.
@schok513 ай бұрын
Why?
@introprospector2 жыл бұрын
This has nothing to do with bit rot. It's a rossetta stone problem
@schok513 ай бұрын
What do you mean? He explained his conception of bit rot. A rosetta stone for all possible data encoding would be a sort of solution, but he mentions the barriers on that posed by intellectual property considerations (most encodings are proprietary and not available to the public).
@schok513 ай бұрын
And it would have to be a perpetually evolving Rosetta stone that has to remain readable no matter the technology (technology independent, language independent)