Print

Print


It seems to me that a "Mass Digitisation" panel/session would be a good 
thing for our next conference. Perhaps someone could update us on things 
like SAMMA, the PrestoSpace project, and things of that sort. I agree, 
it really is the only way to go.

Cheers

Marcos

Andes, Donald wrote:
>  
> Jim,
> 
> Let me add a positive retort here, (before the waves of negative ones
> begin)....
> 
> I agree with you 100% that most in the archival world are focusing on
> the wrong issues, or maybe have been lingering on the same problems for
> too long. The issue in my mind is scale because most in the archival
> industry are seeing a box, or room full of tapes, and have not had the
> opportunity to see over 1 million assets in a single location, nor
> contemplated what to do with them.
> 
> As the Director of Archives for EMI, I look at all the assets under my
> control (over 1 million, just in North America), and think to myself:
> "How much sense does it make to preserve these assets in these formats,
> when the machines, engineer knowledge base, and media itself if
> deteriorating."
> 
> Once you scale out and see the big picture, you start to see the REALLY
> big problem. If we (the archival industry) can't get a digitization
> schema to be cost effective, we simply won't get the funds to digitize.
> Worse, if someone outside the archival industry, gets "their" plans in
> motion, you can rest assure that it will not be done anywhere near
> correct.
> 
> As you know, the barriers to digital migration are also far more complex
> than the real time transfer that it involves (even if we're using SAMMA
> "robots".) Digital files take error checking, redundant copies, naming
> conventions, metadata collection, metadata hierarchy standards, etc.
> Figuring all this out UP FRONT, makes for a daunting task that I will
> venture to say, takes a completely different skill/mind set than analog.
> Unfortunately people don't change, and no matter how many positive
> reasons you give to migrate, those entrenched in analog will want to
> stay there.
> 
> I believe there should be communal, parallel thinking in regards to mass
> digitization strategies, metadata collection and so forth. I am aware of
> library groups focusing specifically on metadata, but I have my own
> concern with their focus, and priorities in regards to collecting
> metadata on A/V assets.
> 
> I'm available for dialog on this topic, and I would hope that others on
> the list may open minded enough as well.
> 
> 
> Don Andes
> Director of Archives
> EMI Music
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> The point is that Analog is over, and the sooner we get to the really
> hard job of developing cost effective mass migration techniques to save
> the vast corpus the better. Now some of you may say my statements are
> self-serving - and I will fully and freely admit that I have worked very
> hard to develop these techniques and have worked to commercialize them -
> but I do not see any other way to save the content, and I have been
> successful in driving the price lower and lower using new technology.
> But - we are just one company - and we need help - yes we need
> competition because THE point is to save the content - and to do that -
> we need to be thinking differently. The problem is not how do we stop a
> single troublesome tape from squeaking - the problem is how do we
> migrate the millions of recordings fast enough and cost effective enough
> and good enough - for the future. I don't see much of that going on -
> and it deeply concerns me. We need more people thinking this way - I
> want to read about techniques that can be applied to thousands of tapes
> that will allow fast and cost effective transfer. This is something that
> we ALL need to work on - the collective brains and expertise on this
> list and others needs to focus - we can differ in our individual
> philosophies but please let us not get so distracted by esoteric un-
> scaleable treatments, that we forget the whole point. Which is - to save
> the stuff. I am sad to say that collectively - all of us (including me)-
> have not been doing a very good job - we need to do MUCH better. We need
> to work together - and smarter. The risk of loss is simply too great.
> 
> Ok - I am done - and I am running,,,,
> 
> Jim Lindner
> 
> Email: [log in to unmask]
> 
>    Media Matters LLC.
>    SAMMA Systems LLC.
>    450 West 31st Street 4th Floor
>    New York, N.Y. 10001
> 
> eFax (646) 349-4475
> Mobile: (917) 945-2662
> Office: (212) 268-5528
> 
> www.media-matters.net
> Media Matters LLC. is a technical consultancy specializing in archival
> audio and video material. We provide advice and analysis, to media
> archives that apply the beneficial advances in technology to collection
> management.
> 
> www.sammasystems.com
> SAMMA Systems provides tools and products that implement and optimize
> the advances in modern technology with established media preservation
> and access practices.
> 
> 
> On May 14, 2007, at 1:59 PM, Richard L. Hess wrote:
> 
>> At 07:48 AM 2007-05-14, Tom Fine wrote:
>>> Hi Konrad:
>>>
>>> Some of what this guy says is simply not right about sticky-shed.  
>>> I can't comment on his "cure". I'll stick with baking tapes, which is
> 
>>> proven to work.
>>>
>>> I'm hoping Richard Hess posts a long missive on this one. With this 
>>> topic well-addressed many other places, I wonder why so much 
>>> mythology persists?
>> Hello, Tom, Konrad,
>>
>> Peter Brothers has posted an excellent hypothesis as to why the 
>> chemical technique may work. If we consider that the short (broken) 
>> chains which is the lower molecular weight, sticky stuff ends up 
>> partially adsorbing to the magnetic particles when water is driven 
>> out, then this mystery chemical could also be a water "magnet" and can
> 
>> pull the water out of the coating allowing sites for the short chains 
>> to adsorb. This is consistent with the baking process.
>>
>> We certainly have seen tapes suffering from binder hydrolysis -- what 
>> I'm starting to call "Soft Binder Syndrome" (SBS). With non- 
>> back-coated tapes there is a large population (not 100%, but close) 
>> that do not respond to baking. These are the SBS without SSS tapes.
>> We used to call them "loss of lubricant" (LoL) until we found out 
>> there was still ample lubricant in the tapes.
>>
>> What we are seeing with the non-back-coated tapes that have SBS (and 
>> squeal) is that they are in a rubbery phase at room temperature 
>> because the breakdown of the polymers has caused the temperature at 
>> which the surface turns from smooth to rubbery (called the GLASS 
>> TRANSITION TEMPERATURE or Tg) has fallen to below room temperature. 
>> What we do in these cases is play the tapes with the tape and the 
>> player below the current Tg of the tape.
>>
>> Measuring Tg is not easy -- you need to measure the Youngs Modulus of 
>> the Coating (alone not on the basefilm) at various temperatures and 
>> from that plot you can extract the Tg.
>>
>> It all comes down to the tapes decaying and for all of the 
>> polyester-polyurethane tapes it appears that moisture is the catalyst 
>> for the breakdown -- hence as Peter says, it's all hydroysis.
>>
>> Incubation/baking appears to cause enough movement in the tape pack to
> 
>> break the layer-to-layer bonds that form under pressure (especially 
>> near the hub) that causes pinning and pullouts. I have found that slow
> 
>> (1.88 in/s) playback of the tape also helps in that regard.
>>
>> I think our goal here is to use reliable, tested processes and 
>> digitize the content. I spent a substantial amount of effort working 
>> on tapes that squealed and did not respond to baking. My cold playing 
>> technique (which I encourage all of you to try and respond back) 
>> should, in theory, work with SSS tape as well as SBS (and I suggest 
>> that SSS is a subset of SBS), but the massive amounts of debris 
>> generated by the backcoat/magcoat combination overwhelms the 
>> capability of cold playback (at least right now) and at pro play 
>> speeds, pullout is exacerbated due to the bonding between backcoat and
> 
>> magcoat.
>>
>> I do not think we've yet seen a documented case of LoL so thankfully 
>> that myth is being put to bed. We used to think the squealing Sony 
>> PR-150 and 3M 175 was LoL, but we now see that it is SBS. By the way, 
>> the Tg of one sample of 175 was about +8C or about 46F.
>>
>> Keeping polyester polyurethane tapes dry (<40% RH) is a good way to 
>> keep them feeling OK. I had a non-backcoated tape of this type that 
>> had been peaking at 75% RH in storage "heal" after three months 
>> storage at about 40% RH.
>>
>> By the way, it is approximately a minute:day relationship between 
>> thermal and moisture equilibrium--or at least that's a convenient way 
>> to think of it. In other words if a tape takes 90 minutes to reach 
>> thermal equilibrium throughout the pack, then it takes 90 days to 
>> reach moisture equilibrium. This is based on work with 1- inch tapes 
>> so 1/4-inch tapes might not be as bad, but it seems to match my 
>> experience.
>>
>> My AES paper cites the reference for that.
>>
>> In general, I am less happy with a chemical approach than a 
>> physical/state approach (within limits) to the SBS/SSS problem as 
>> there is a great chance of unknown, long-term damage from any chemical
> 
>> approach. With that said, I have tried approaches to SBS based on the 
>> LoL hypothesis and they were abysmal failures.
>>
>> Konrad: we did have a belated success in your neck of the woods with 
>> playing a tape in a fridge. Paul or Mike have the details. I think it 
>> needed 48 hours of cold soak before it played.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Richard
>>
>>
>> Richard L. Hess                   email: [log in to unmask]
>> Aurora, Ontario, Canada       (905) 713 6733     1-877-TAPE-FIX
>> Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/ 
>> contact.htm Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.
> 
> - --------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Music from EMI 
> 
> This e-mail including any attachments is confidential and may be legally privileged. If you have received it in error please advise the sender immediately by return email and then delete it from your system. The unauthorised use, distribution, copying or alteration of this email is strictly forbidden. If you need assistance please contact us on +44 20 7795 7000. 
> 
> This email is from a unit or subsidiary of EMI Group plc. 
> 
> Registered Office: 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5SW 
> 
> Registered in England No 229231.
> 
> 
> - --------------------------------------------------------------------

-- 
Marcos Sueiro Bal
Audio/Moving Image Project Archivist
Preservation Division
Columbia University Libraries