Re: A 50,000-year time capsule in space...

From: James Rogers (jamesr@best.com)
Date: Sat Apr 17 1999 - 10:51:26 MDT


The biggest problem is deterioration of the media. The storage life of CD
media isn't even close to 50,000 years. Normal aluminum film CDs are only
good for about 100 years and recordable CD media is around 20 (although it
varies widely depending on the type). The longest lasting ones, gold film
CD masters, will last less than 1,000 years.

Oh well. I guess they'll find out the hard way 50,000 years from now.

-James Rogers
 jamesr@best.com

At 04:27 PM 4/16/99 -0400, you wrote:
>
>OK but let's say that 50,000 years from now, the geography is so altered
>that satellite goes *plop* into the ocean/major fault line/volcano crater.
>It's then unrecoverable. Let's also say that 50,000 yrs from now nobody
>knows what a CD is, and labels it a "religious/ritual item" or
>"decorative".
>
>What if they invent time travel, no matter what we think, and have gone
>back into our time, and are posing as KEO to get free artifacts to bring
>with them since currency is no longer used and they can't buy their own
>cd's/satellites? Ow, my head.
>
>- Tamara
>zygant@tdsecurities.com
>



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