Digital Packrats 385
meganthom writes "According to the BBC, Britons have been hoarding digital data, with many carrying the equivalent of 10 trucks of paper "weight" with them at all times. A survey by Toshiba found that 60% of Brits keep 1000-2000 music files on their portable electronic devices. Do increases in storage capacity appeal to some basic pack-rat nature?"
Short answer... (Score:2, Funny)
Yes (Score:3, Insightful)
What an obscure unit... (Score:5, Funny)
Can't they use a real unit? Like Library of Congresses? I'm getting a bit sick of all of these random units. Back in my day, my data had a densitey of 2.3 Library of Congresses per Hogs head, and that's the way we liked it!
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2)
Back in my day, my data had a densitey of 2.3 Library of Congresses per Hogs head, and that's the way we liked it!
Ha, in my day we stored data in a shoebox full of 90 column UNIVAC cards, and God help the person who folded one or put a hole in the wrong place.
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2)
I once dropped a tray full of mine. Cards all over the place. Talk about spaghetti code...
Bogus Units (Score:4, Insightful)
That conversion only makes sense for data that is "naturally" convertible to paper for printing: reports, manuals, e-books, etc., but this conversion makes NO sense for digital music files.
A typical mp3 is what - about 5 megabytes? And let's say a typical CD has 10 songs. That's 50 MB. So, for mp3s, a gigabyte "weighs" about the same as 20 compact discs. Even if you count the weight of the jewel box and liner notes in that weight, an mp3 gigabyte is a hell of a lot less than a truck full of paper.
Given the bogosity of this, hell, you might as well "weigh" data in solar masses. Or Gummi Bears. Or Mount McKinleys. Or...
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2)
I suggest you take a break and come back later.
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:2)
Re:What an obscure unit... (Score:5, Funny)
We do NOT use that type of language around here!
Re:Who needs it? (Score:2)
It doesn't even have to be a '0' and '1'. Could be '+' and '-', or 'x' and 'y', or even "green eggs" and "ham"...
As long as you have the space (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As long as you have the space (Score:2)
What's the chances you'll need that old college paper about some random societal issue of the time? Not very likely, but
Re:As long as you have the space (Score:2)
What kind of miserable filesystem do you have?
Well, DUH... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a naturally evolved human characteristic to grow and expand and eventually consume every resource that is available to us. Why should data storage be any different?
Re:Well, DUH... (Score:2)
DNA versus other digital data (Score:2)
Perhaps even more interesting is that at some point we may be able to store on our persons more information that accessible capacity of our brains.
At some point in the long future, mory cpapcities will exceed the number of cells in your brain. At this point it may become more relevant t
I'm a digital packrat (Score:5, Interesting)
I carry a USB stick with my financial balances on it, as well as some other stuff. Good stuff I browse at work gets saved there. Every so often, I need to dump the accumulated debris off of it. It goes right on the fileserver without even being sorted.
I'm a packrat in real life, and with me it does carry over into the digital world.
Re:I'm a digital packrat (Score:2)
Same here except it's 240GB of duplicates of the 60 or so Gigabytes of crap on my powerbook. I don't collect crap so much because I am a packrat. I make sequential backups of my crap to pacify my sense of paranoia, I suppose I have seen to many harddisk crashes.
Re:I'm a digital packrat (Score:2)
I don't keep anything of importance on single disk machines, it all gets backed up. I'm sure that just adds to my crap total, but at least I'm not doing sequential backups. That's bad! ;-)
Re:I'm a digital packrat (Score:2)
I am too security minded to carry any numbers on my person. I memorize thos
Obviously (Score:4, Insightful)
With things like Google Desktop Search and that other one (whose name I can't remember but has just announced their new version), people don't even have to be organised with their files - they can keep everything they want and find it quickly and easily.
Re:Obviously (Score:2)
With things like closets and yards people don't even have to be organized. They can keep everything they want and find it quickly and easily.
Re:Obviously (Score:2)
With things like closets and yards people don't even have to be organized. They can keep everything they want and find it quickly and easily.
Nowadays, your disk array isn't a closet, or even a yard. it's a fucking warehouse. Even if i never threw anything away, i'd be hard-pressed to run out of space on my lowly 60G drive. If I ever did, 160G disks are cheap.
Re:Obviously (Score:2)
Look at data mining and p2p (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course the simplest answer may be that it is the 21st century's equivalent of collecting baseball cards. The latest way for my peers and I to trade music anyway is by syncing our iPods and sending over several thousand songs at once. Maybe it's "communism card collecting..."
Re:Look at data mining and p2p (Score:2)
I am not suprised in the least. Back in the BBS days, i knew people who accumulated just gobs and gobs of copyrighted software. Did they need a DB server, CAD program, etc? No, never used, never installed. Near as i could figure out, beyond an inate need/desire to aggregate and accumulate there were a few main reasons people wanted all that code.
To answer your question... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:To answer your question... (Score:2)
Wow, you mean you're willing to flip through all those damned video frames just for
Oh, wait, that's a song isn't it?
Re:Yes but, (Score:3, Informative)
Perhaps... (Score:4, Insightful)
My hoarding nature has saved me on more than one occasion. The fact that I don't delete non-spam e-mail ever has saved a friend of mine from very serious legal trouble and my boss has the annoying habit of sending me somewhere and neglecting to warn me that I'll need to take a copy of the demo system from a completely different presentation. Thankfully, I still had it, so she didn't end up unable to fulfill her promises.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2)
No, free space is wasted space.
Packrat mentality (Score:5, Interesting)
keep it under your hat (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:keep it under your hat (Score:3, Informative)
Re:keep it under your hat (Score:2)
Re:keep it under your hat (Score:2)
For certain projects, I have to be very careful about intermediary files even when there is nothing else on the account.
Re:keep it under your hat (Score:2)
Re:keep it under your hat (Score:2)
10 trucks of paper weight = bullshit figure (Score:3, Insightful)
Definitely annoying. (Score:3, Insightful)
I smell an agenda in that story, though. Next thing you know, somebody will come out with a "study" claiming that "data obesity" causes "stress-related illness" or some such bullshit.
Is it pack-rat nature? (Score:5, Insightful)
What a strange and often meaningless article.
60% of Brits keep 1000-2000 music files on their portable electronic devices
Is that really pack-rat nature? Portable music devices are popular because they hold lots of songs, so you don't have to drag around your 500-CD collection. I'd say it's more of a convenience issue than a hoarding issue. A better example of "hoarding" would be those people who download every single NES ROM they find on KaZaA "just to have it". I've talked to regular FPS addicts who have ROMs like "Sesame Street" and "Barbie" burned to their ROM discs for no reason other than to say they have X games.
He worked out that one gigabyte (1,073,741,824 bytes) was the equivalent of a pick-up truck filled with paper.
Does this even make sense to compare music files to a truck full of paper?
Re:Is it pack-rat nature? (Score:2)
No, but if you'd kindly convert it to units of LOC, I'd appreciate.
Indeed ... (Score:2)
I have about a gig of MP3's on my office machine, which is a subset of the several gigs I have at home. It represents almost my entire music collection. Nowadays I buy a CD and rip it before I've even played it in most cases.
If I ever get around to buying na iPod I'm looking forward to
Re:Is it pack-rat nature? (Score:2)
Not really. However, if you consider that each 4 minute song takes up ~4MB, you can hold about 250 songs per GB. Translated to sheet music, this could be about 4 or 5 pages (or more realistically, 2 pages filled with repeats since modern music is so repetitive, and another page for lyrics), then I'd say those same 250 songs would only take up about 1-1/2 reams of paper, which is hardly anything. The box of copy paper sitting next t
Re:Is it pack-rat nature? (Score:2)
Quality, convenience and tidiness (Score:5, Informative)
So naturally any small digital appliance that can hoard all their music and TV recordings is going to popular. The only barrier to wider acceptance is the ease of use.
Don't Understand (Score:5, Interesting)
Nooo. Instead we've got students here with spindles of CD-Rs full up with anime fansubs they are never going to watch again. I know a guy who has every episode of MST3K ever in a giant spindle. I don't think he's ever opened it. I also heard a buy bragging the other day about his 400 gig drive with only 20 gigs free because he filled it with movies.
These people are just stupid. They feel that this data is a "posession" of "value". They have something in their brain that makes them feel that having this data does something for them even if they never use it. They need to get a life. I mean, in the worst case scenario I delete something that I do indeed plan to watch again, I can *gasp* download it again! It doesn't take that long.
But I bet the hard disk and optical media industries live on these morons. So at least they do some good.
Re:Don't Understand (Score:4, Insightful)
But you're the "smart" one for wasting time deleting stuff, only to waste more time re-downloading it later when you realise you did need it after all?
Hmm. Not sure if I agree with you there. The only thing I will agree on is that copying something you probably won't use on to CD-R is pointless.
Data consumerism.... (Score:3, Interesting)
What is the point?
Re:Don't Understand (Score:3, Insightful)
This is actually pretty important. Imagine your lady friend stops by and you get to talking about that great old movie that she never saw. You couldn't watch it right then if you needed to spend 2 days looking for it and 3 days downloading it. It could mean the difference between happily married and single forever!
It's called random access and is at work everywhere both in technology and otherwise. You don't use a tape drive instead of a hard disk do you?
Nooo. Instead we'v
Re:Don't Understand (Score:2)
I hope that passes muster with you.
But when I hear the words "anime" combined with "fansubs", I gotta agree with you. I'm a digital pack rat, but I actually use what I keep a
Re:Don't Understand (Score:2)
I have more HD storage space and stuff backed up on media than I can count. Easily terabytes of the stuff. You're perfectly right, I'm not going to sift through the huge piles of CD-R's and DVD-R's to find something, if I want to see some old anime episode it is almost always faster to simply download it again.
However, the dream is that I one day will have all this stuff at my fingertips. My first drive cost a s
60% of ALL people? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've thought about this. (Score:2)
So I'm running low on space. I could do one of the following:
a) Sort through it all and decide what's useless. (This would take forever.)
b) Add more drive space. Drives are cheap.
Backups for big gig drives... (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe. But I wonder how shocked some of these people will be when their 250 GB HD bites the dust. It was bad enough losing 40+ GB to a head crash but now...!
Re:Backups for big gig drives... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Backups for big gig drives... (Score:2)
Re:Backups for big gig drives... (Score:2)
No cost (Score:3, Insightful)
Only in Brits. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Only in Brits. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Only in Brits. (Score:4, Funny)
I don't believe it... (Score:2)
I do it. (Score:2)
I never clean out my downloads folder until it reaches 4gb in size, then I just burn it to a dvd-r and label it with the date and stick it in the folder, deleting everything from the hard drive. My My Documents folder is huge in size, almost 2gb at last count (this has also been backed up several times)
I have cd-r's full of warez dating back to 1994. I have the
Bah. I'm Still Waiting... (Score:2)
Please, Mr. Jobs, don't make me have to choose between my Techno-Industrial-Gothic and my Tibetan Singing Bowls again this week... please!!
Storage (Score:2)
I used to delete games back in the DOS days, but that was only in order to install new games, and I still kept the originals.
Storage space gets cheaper and more reliable with every passing day, and the mar
Re:Storage (Score:3, Insightful)
aha! the new p2p model rears it's head... (Score:2)
imagine if Ipods and others were interconnectible, and transmitted their songs at school or on the bus, or at work, you hook them together and hit 'transmit' the **AA's will have to start putting schills in the field to find you.. and you could still claim (us based) fair use...
PSSST, HEY BUDDDY, WANT THE NEW BRITTNEY ALBULM?
I know there are usb keys that will transmit to other keys on demand... they have both female and male sock
a better alternative to being a packrat (Score:2)
since i was a kid, i have been greatly bothered by this, especially seeing how much it distressed my mom. as a result, i have been very conscious o
Why not? (Score:2)
Myself, I archived and kept a lot of stuff back in college. Now I don't have
Why is it such an issue? (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't see whats wrong with having so much digital data. In fact I get a wee bit excited when I go throught a CD I recorded several years ago and find an old photo or video I'd forgotten all about.
Or are they trying to flog Toshiba hard drives?
So they think they're hording packets? (Score:2)
The Fundamental Rule of Everything (Score:3, Insightful)
The stuff will expand to fill the storage.
The files will expand to fill the disks.
The clothes will expand to fill the closet.
The junk will expand to fill the basement.
The books will expand to fill the shelves.
The body will expand to fill the clothes.
The project will expand to fill the schedule/budget.
And, of course: The outgo will rise to equal or exceed the income.
This applies to music files, just as well as it applies to everything else.
Why do it? (Score:2)
The other aspect is availability... Since it's not like each additional song on your player makes it weigh more (unlike their paper comparison), why not? Having your whole music collection on there
Yeah, kind of like my garage (Score:2, Funny)
Same stuff, different box (Score:3, Interesting)
I have about 150 CDs and 3000 books. This is neither unusual nor takes up an excessive amount of space. Having all of it at my fingertips in a few cubic inches of storage is convenience and efficiency born of the information age, not "packrat".
The article states "He worked out that one gigabyte (1,073,741,824 bytes) was the equivalent of a pick-up truck filled with paper." That is a preposterous comparison, as by that measure a single vinyl LP record equates to a half-truck of paper - were we thus "packrats" back in the 60's? hardly.
A movie, uncompressed full-resolution, is about 2TB. Squashing it onto a DVD does not equate to truckloads of paper, it's simply a different medium.
Cute shocking analogy. Get real. Having a normal book/music/video library in your pocket is progress, not "packratting".
It costs time to delete things (Score:2)
No, but it takes time to go through files to see what you want to delete. So extra disk space saves me time, which is much more valuable.
tinfoil hat (Score:2)
Ipod = 230 GB a kilogram? (Score:3, Interesting)
Inversely, the weight per bit (ignoring checkbits and formatting waste) is half a nano-gram.
I choose IPOD as a reference because it is "a full media device" and not just a raw disk.
One five pound, 500-page ream of typewriter paper prints 2 megabytes both sides a 2,000 bytes per page of text. A gigabyte is 2.5 tonnes. Each bit is about a half milligram.
Digital vs Analog Fat... (Score:2, Insightful)
Doesn't surprise me (Score:2)
I have 10 gigs of music
it may be in our genes (Score:2)
Printing truck loads of music files? (Score:2, Insightful)
Then again, I rarely use Word, most are ascii files.
I won't tell about the amount of photos and video I have...
When is it too much? (Score:2, Interesting)
I have a family member who needs to have a copy of every single song. He's been building it for years and has 10s of 1000s of songs. I sat down and built a play list the other and while the songs came up and were playing he kept saying, "where'd you find that? I got that?" It was all stuff on his computer....
I personally keep a list of maybe several 100 songs, but carry on me about
Duh. Next article, please. (Score:2)
Mathematical model for human behavior? (Score:2)
It would involve a constant for the amount of time and effort it takes to delete stuff (the same whether you have a terabyte-class iPod or a 2 Gb hard drive), and a factor for the percent of free space you have on the storage device.
When you have 99 percent free space, you're much less likely to think, "Do I really need this?" than you might if you had ten percent free.
Yeah, we're just walking bags of seawater,
Everything (Score:2)
My personal storage timeline:
1994 - 200MB
1996 - 1GB
1998 - 3GB
2000 - 30GB
2001 - 90GB
2002 - 170GB
2003 - 290GB
2004 - 1.01TB
The way the Crown taxes everything... (Score:2)
Sure - in my case it's freeware (Score:2)
Apart from the standard collection of MP3s (the only ripped off stuff being old radio series like The Burkiss Way - not cos I'm precious about copyright, but cos I can't be arsed with p2p most of the time) it's all freeware. I love trying out little apps that I can d/l over the net. I collect source code - just to have a look at mos
hmmm. (Score:3, Interesting)
1Gb on the Istick USB Drive [pricegrabber.com] in my wallet
(DSLinux/Qemu, all my pgp keys/apps, a blowfish encrypted iso drive, lastes win SP, spyware remover, antivirus, boot disk iso's)
40GB on the ipod, (lots and lots and lots and lots of music)
Having several full length movies on the cell is just far too useful for waiting on oil changes, mva work, doctors offices.
The Mp3's play in the car and at my desk. It's not unlike carrying around a binder of CD's which a lot of people did before the mp3 days. I don't think carrying a binder of music CD's was ever considered hoarding even if you had 100 discs on you.
If you wanted to stop there, is that really hoarding? You're carring around entertainment. If so people have been hoarding for a long long time and who are we to break tracdition? Would it be any different if you were listening to the radio or watching a portable tv? It could deliver the same content you're just accessing remotely.
Now the crypt data and linux distro has a use in my daily life..ok weekly life.. but I'm willing to grant that's hoarding. But that's also well out of the scope of the article.
When it became feasable to store a few thousand characterd in a magnetic strip, Drivers licenses (some states) and credit cards jumped on the bandwagon. When smartchips appeared on the scene, the financial community was in a rush to embed them in thier credit cards. It's now feasable to carry a small harddrive and battery with you. If a couple of gigs of portable music freak these guys out, just wait till 80GB video players [archos.com] become mainstream.
Definitely (Score:2)
The Neuroscience of Hoarding (Score:2)
So, this doesn't seem abnormal to me. Though it's interesting to imagine how humans will react to the ability to hoard more in the same or even less "space" as it's all information.
doesn't that get heavy? (Score:3, Funny)
It's cost of storage, not quantity (Score:3, Insightful)
I have several digital cameras. One takes very tiny photos, about .3 megapixel and average about 30K or less. It's fine for most pictures which are going to be printed or posted on web pages. I had to buy the media for it on eBay because it won't take Smartmedia larger than 8 meg, and the smallest you can buy Smartmedia now is 16. But on one 8 meg cartridge, 1/2 the size of a piece of chewing gum, I can save over 400 pictures before having to change the cartridge. Another camera I have takes about 2MP pictures and on a 64 MB smartmedia I can hold upwards of 200 pictures.
I wanted to increase the amount of space I had on my computer in order to back up the files I have. There was an ad for a 160 GB drive on sale for something like $99.00. Then I find that there is a 200 GB drive on sale for $89 at a different store. At these prices the cost of storing one GB of material is 50c. To read a gigabyte of text would take almost a year (at 1 page/minute), it's the equivalent of 500,000 printed pages. A gigabyte of music files would represent about 800 minutes, 200 songs or about 15 hours.
Case in point, because of compression, songs can be stored at about 1 MB per minute using MP3 or OGG Vorbis, and thus a regular CD goes from holding about 10-15 songs (at 4 minutes each) to capable of holding 100-150 songs. And the equipment is now taking advantage of this: The Bose Radio is now advertised as playing regular or MP3 CDs.
Last Christmas I got a (cheap) DVD player that was advertised as being able to play MP3 CDs. So I took a bunch of MP3s, about 120, collected them to a CD and burned them from a Windows computer. Took the CD over to the DVD player, and it brought up a window listing the songs by file name, and started playing the first one. It treated each song on the CD as if it was a different track on a regular CD. This CD cost 17c and holds over 6 hours of music. The cost of any particular music file on the disc rounds so close to zero as to be almost costless.
Digital files have no weight, use no physical space and the only consideration is the capacity of the storage medium. As storage becomes more compact at lower prices the cost of storing files becomes less and less, and the amount of files one can carry increases exponentially.
The only real problem we have is the use of proprietary formats that cannot be recovered when the medium changes. I used to have 8" diskettes for stuff I had for the PDP-11; I could no longer read those now. I can no longer read 5" diskettes for the PC unless I find an old computer and buy it for the floppy drive. The 3 1/2" diskette is becoming obsolete except as a near-universal exchange medium and for use on older computers without CD drives.
migration since 1988 (Score:3, Interesting)
digital media is ephemeral, it is only the fact that i have consistently
done the work of migrating data from medium to medium for more
than two decades (since 1981) that has made the data accesible.
the biggest change is that before, you could not keep all your
data in one place on a hard drive, which meant you're always managing
data in discrete physical 'chunks' -- as they happen to be distributed
across multiple removable media.
but now, we can now consoldate all that stuff into one place
with the use of massive hard drive space, and this makes
managing that data an order of magnitude easier.
migration has been:
- 1981: trs80, 70k 5.25" floppies
- 1986: rs232 serial port to macintosh plus 800k 3.5" floppies
- 1998: ethernet cable from ZIP disks to imac, and burnt to CD.
- 2004: it FINALLY all fits in one place -- from 1981 to 2004 fits
into about 20gig.
- the rest, from about 1998 - 2004 -- takes about about another 20gig,
because instead of data, it has become audio, photographs, and these
data formats consume considerably more space for what you get.
> so: twenty-three years of DATA (applications, downloads, database,
fonts, documnents, etc) fits into 20gig -- but of the newer media
types (photo, mp3, and video) has taken 20gigs in four years.
> its not a matter of trying to get as much data as possible,
but rather of having as little data as possible, but not leaving
any essential element out. thus, the data has been highly refined.
> i've found i've started organizing things by YEAR,
and by FREQUENCY of the rate at which the data-type may grow.
regards from storm's nest [earthlink.net].
Re:And how many of those music files ... (Score:2)
It's got 2100 songs in my music library. They're from 174 albums I've collected over the years. This excludes any LPs and tapes I also have. All legal. And I know people with twice that many.
Not because you own two dozen legal albums that anyone having more is an automatic crook.
(Oh, and two ITMS songs... but I personoally know someone with more than 150: all in two weeks of ITMS being in Canada)
Re:I delete (Score:2)
It's also insurance if P2P ever was to be squelched by the [MP|RI]AA. I have my doubts that I could get my stuff replaced at any cost if that happened.
Re:It's the data retrieval system that matters (Score:2)
But who will archive the lives of the archivers?