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Media

Afterlife Will Be Costly For Digital Films 395

Andy Updegrove writes "For a few years now we've been reading about the urgency of adopting open document formats to preserve written records. Now, a 74-page report from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences warns that digital films are as vulnerable to loss as digitized documents, but vastly more expensive to preserve — as much as $208,569 per year. The reasons are the same for video as for documents: magnetic media degrade quickly, and formats continue to be created and abandoned. If this sounds familiar and worrisome, it should. We are rushing pell-mell into a future where we only focus on the exciting benefits of new technologies without considering the qualities of older technologies that are equally important — such as ease of preservation — that may be lost or fatally compromised when we migrate to a new whiz-bang technology." Here's a registration-free link for the NYTimes article cited in Andy's post.

Comment Read slashdot in the morning, pick it up same day (Score 2, Informative) 338

Yup, I got my Time Warner DVR today. AND I'm already recording some shows for my wife. I just filled out the form on www.twcnyc.com, they called me and I was able to pick it up - with no installation fee - the same day.

I have to agree with some of the other posts that the changing of channels is a little slow, but the cost comparison makes it worth it. PLUS, if I don't like it I can just swap boxes again (Time Warner has offices close to me so it's not an issue) and not have to worry about the investment cost.

The fact that the monthly recurring cost was less than ReplayTV and TiVo was the closer for me. I already have the cable modem package, so it's only $6.95/mo.

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