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Re: September Data
Hi Tom,
Perhaps the question should be: "Is there a way to burn CD's that
doesn't involve your continuous presence at the machine?" If you are
always writing three copies, you could potentially run these on three
CD-burners simultaneously (possibly on the same computer, but not
necessarily). Would buying a CD production unit free up your time?
Cheers,
Doug
tom wrote:
>I know some of you sneer, but September is turning into a record month. I
>have burned 300 CDs so far this month. I keep wondering if there is a better
>way to archive data, but my research says that CDs are probably the best
>media for long term storage.
>
>It is a royal pain since it takes several hours just sitting in front of CD
>burners each day. It is a real pain since it the interval between changing
>CDs is not long enough to do much else and if I try I make mistakes.
>
>So far I have taken data 19 out of the first 20 days in September. This
>should make a nice sequence for testing things about the data. All the data
>is not perfect. Some stars, for example, grow halos at some periods in the
>night. I think it is a question of ground fog and the like. Still, when I
>exclude such frames from the data set, the scatter does not improve. So
>there is something else going on that is there on clear nights.
>
>I am not saying fuzzy frames don't have larger errors, I am saying that the
>frames that look bad contribute less error from their badness than other
>hidden errors. If we fix the other error, then possible excluding "bad"
>frames might make the data better, but not at present.
>
>Tom Droege
>
>