Found another box of data CD’s and DVD’s.
I’ve gone through the entire box.
I always knew I was a data packrat. But this experience has taught me a lesson.
That lesson boils down to, “What’s the point?”
To be fair, I did recover a few more “important” documents and photos. Those will be sorted into the long term archive on a portable drive hard drive. Nothing made by Western Digital by the way. Their reliability has gone straight into the crapper.
The rest… Completely useless. Either the disc wouldn’t mount, or it would only mount using Windows but if I got it to mount the data wasn’t worth preserving and probably never was.
Why on earth I stored copies of software that I’d downloaded I’ll never know. That’s not entirely true either. I know why I stored those files. At the time downloads were painfully slow, so if I needed to reinstall something at least I didn’t have to re-download it.
But, where I failed was in purging the obsolete stuff. Also my data storage methods leave a lot to be desired. It would have been one thing if I’d stored all the downloads on a disc helpfully labeled “Downloaded Software” and put a date on it.
Then just by looking at the date, I’d have been able to toss the disc without fear of something being unrecoverable. As fast as software is updated (even then) most of these programs were obsolete by the time I burned them to a disc in the first place.
Then there were the original discs that I purchased off the shelf. Those too appear to have been damaged by time and perhaps the heat from the house fire. I was able to recover some fonts but honestly it wasn’t worth the effort.
So, next to my chair here, I’ve got a stack of discs and their cases all destined for the trash.
When I say stack, what I really mean is a trash bag full.
I get why Apple stopped building CD/DVD burners into their computers. The world has moved on. I also found a bunch of floppy discs.
For just a moment, I wondered if I could get a cheap floppy drive just to see what’s on those. I could, but then I thought, “Why?” It’s not like any of that data is launch codes or access codes to a vault or anything. I’m not working in the government or at the FAA after all.
I’ve got a ton of memory sticks and portable hard drives that are also in various states of decay. I’ve even got some network storage drives laying around that are shot for no apparent reason. Those that worked, I’ve transferred to the big network drive and that unit is happily searching for, and deleting duplicates.
As I’ve been working my way through all of this It occurred to me that I should go through the archive folder on the big drive and purge any software that I’m not currently using. That’s a project for later… Much Later!
Another dumb thing I did back in the day was zipped files or used other types of compression when I burned stuff to CDs.
At the time it made sense because I was trying to save space. From a long term storage point of view it was dumb because so many of those early compression techniques have been rendered obsolete.
So for the future, I’m not compressing shit when I archive it. Turns out encrypting “important stuff” was also a mistake. Why? Because the encryption formats I used are no longer available even though I know the passwords or pass phrases.
To access some of this data, I’d have to have a computer from the period, and dig up a copy of the software I used to compress or encrypt it.
All of which is to say, nothing is permanent and unless you stay on top of changing standards decrypting and re-encrypting as time goes on, your data is going to be lost.
In other words it’s a maintenance nightmare.
I suppose, one could write a script or something that kicked off periodically to perform the maintenance but then you lose all time context since you’d be essentially recreating the files with every maintenance pass. I guess that problem could be worked around by updating some kind of text index preserving the original creation date and subsequent maintenance cycle date with each pass.
The point is, why? Do any of us have data that’s really all that important?
Which leads me to a larger lesson. If something isn’t being used, and it’s just stuck away in a closet or basement occupying space. You’re probably better off just tossing it in the trash.
At least then when you move, you don’t have to agonize over what to keep and what to toss.

As I said, the Christmas tree and associated decorations are all put away. I was able to dispose of a box through consolidation. Going through the decorations was bittersweet.
The house is clean, (except the office,) the amount of stuff remaining to be tossed feels never-ending but I know I’m making progress.
(I smiled as I typed that.)
Not that I’m complaining about it.
This year has flown by!