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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • It’s pretty dependent on humidity and temperature, so a DVD buried in a well sealed plastic bag with a desiccant pack is actually in good conditions. No light, generally cool, and low humidity are perfect.

    A hard drive has a lot of moving parts that must work and are basically impossible to replace. With optical media you’re just storing the platters, and I’m sure you’ll still be able to track down a drive somewhere. You can still find VHS players and those have been obsolete for 25 years.


  • traches@sh.itjust.workstoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    4 months ago

    I’d go with optical media here. Probably multiple capsules.

    • M-Disk (DVD if it will fit, otherwise Blu-ray)
    • Make an encrypted archive of your data. Strong password - I suggest diceware with 8 or more words so you might remember it in 30 years
    • Use DVDisaster to add parity data. You sacrifice some space, but you get error tolerance in exchange
    • Wrap the disks up in good jewel cases, well sealed plastic, along with some good big silica gel desiccant packs.
    • Put all that in the smallest durable, airtight container you can
    • stash somewhere it probably won’t be disturbed for a few decades. Memorize.
    • destroy all evidence you did this.






  • The desktop environment is all the stuff like the taskbar, the settings menus, the application launcher, the login screen, that kind of thing. It’s the system level user interface.

    You choose which one by which distro you download. Linux mint uses cinnamon, Ubuntu and fedora use gnome. There are “flavors” of Ubuntu and fedora that use KDE. That’s why I suggested ventoy: you can download a few different ones and boot into them without making a new thumb drive.

    If you don’t feel like bothering with any of that, just use Linux mint. It’s good.