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submitted 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) by Zerush@lemmy.ml to c/technology@lemmy.ml

A tape-based piece of unique Unix history may have been lying quietly in storage at the University of Utah for 50+ years. The question is whether researchers will be able to take this piece of middle-aged media and rewind it back to the 1970s to get the data off.

See also

https://archive.org/details/utah_unix_v4_raw

TAR file

http://squoze.net/UNIX/v4/

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[-] benagain@lemmy.ml 4 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

A few times since I started journalling I've reflected on how much information in a given day is lost due to it not being "interesting" enough to be written down - and - how the information that makes it through the filter of my own viewpoint could be interpreted by other people who don't live within my context.

In short: if post-apocalyptic humans have nothing other than my journal to rebuild the collective knowledge of our species... we're truly fooked. They'll know the horrors of Microsoft Teams or how friendly the bus driver was.

But for more important things, it made me really re-evaluate just how challenging the maintenance of our collective knowledge is and how as time goes on it gets harder and harder to correctly parse the original source ourselves: instead relying on the interpretations of others who had a closer frame of reference to ours - but - a lens of their own that we have to account for to.

[-] slacktoid@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 hours ago

Time to write on some big ass rocks again!

But really in some ways as tech and storage of info has gotten more dense it really has gotten more fragile and harder to maintain over long periods of time. We may have (m-)disks that can last for decades and more but would the reader last?

this post was submitted on 21 Dec 2025
69 points (100.0% liked)

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