| ▲ | bell-cot 2 hours ago | |||||||
Problems with well-known solutions 100 years ago: "Fireproof file rooms and cabinets in the 1920s were crucial for protecting business and government records during the rapid expansion of the industrial era. The era saw a massive shift from flammable wooden office furniture to robust, steel-based storage designed to resist both fire and water damage." That's a Google AI summary - but I've been in a fair number of buildings with such rooms. Thick concrete walls, heavy steel fire doors, no other openings, nothing but steel file cabinets in 'em, sealed electric light fixtures that look like they belong in a powder magazine (where one spark could kill everyone) - it's really simple tech. And "high ground" was a reliable flood protection tech several centuries before that. | ||||||||
| ▲ | latexr 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Then add “earthquake” to the list, or “domestic terrorists or foreign country bombing the building”. Steelman the argument. The point isn’t “just fire and water specifically”, we’re not playing Pokémon. We have several historic examples of records being lost in disasters, and way more recent than 100 years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Personnel_Records_Cen... It makes no difference that we could’ve prevented that with better building construction. We didn’t, and hindsight does not bring the records back. We should plan for the world we want but cannot ignore the world we have. I’m not defending digital as always better or criticising physical. Like I said, different tradeoffs, meaning there are advantages and disadvantages to both, there’s no solution which is better in all situations. | ||||||||
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