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Seriously, we have to do internal video edits all the time and I wish we had that skill in my company.
Incredible - but he will be an avid Gunner, I would like to test him on doing a mood video for the launch of a facial wipe within a 7 hour timeframe. I guess that might be the reason some of our work isn't up to that standard...
I don't have anything worth backing up, except for a few rare CDs I got off of private trackers, and those are just because it's hell trying to get a decent ratio on those sites.
Concur man. I use a backup external HD but I only belated realized it didn't preserve the file structure of the original HD.
Vista crashed and took 2 years' worth of recordings with it. They're all renamed on this shitty external HD and I will definitely never use them again.
Thus I haven't bothered trying to record anything in three months, I want to really research external HDs (or maybe just giant thumb drives) and do it right this time first, but it's overall depressing and I haven't had the emotional energy to do it yet.
Solid State Drives are going to be the way to go. They should have a much, much better shelf life than standard moving parts HD's.
They're still hella expensive now but they will be industry standard over the next few years. We're almost shot of the whirring of current HD's forever.
Fact: Solid State Technology is the name of a forum where I post almost daily.
I sometimes joke, half-seriously, that we are living in an era that will be considered a dark age by historians. What strikes me is that we no longer keep paper records, but our digital records are not really standardized. I suspect 100 years from now, every email you ever send will be retrievable in some way. Spooky, but they'll be understood even further into the future, unlike us.