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Quote from: David Shaw on October 15, 2009, 05:36:16 PMWhy is it that some that are suitable are in the price range £12 to £15 and others cost £25 to £30? These were on the Tesco rack and the information given seemed to be identical. Is there any benefit in paying the higher price?Contrary to what is said, there is NO true reliable back-up medium. The best thing to do is store important pictures at different locations and on different media. How reliable a CD is for instance depends on the brand of the CD and the brand of the writer used to back-up. A picture backed-up with a Plextor writer on Imation will last a lot longer than on a Tesco CD written with an el cheapo CD writer. ANY media degrades over time. A CD/DVD consists of a metallic layer and a polymer outside. This polymer is just a form of plastic and plastic degrades through enviromental influences. So CD's can also become unreadable. The quality of the polymer and the accuracy of the writer that burned the "holes" in the metallic layer of the CD determines the duration of the backup on CD. Harddrives are based on magnetism, that also degrades over time. And every time data is written to or from a memory chip these read/write actions degrade the chip too.
Why is it that some that are suitable are in the price range £12 to £15 and others cost £25 to £30? These were on the Tesco rack and the information given seemed to be identical. Is there any benefit in paying the higher price?
The Canon all singing IXUS 200 IS - my next camera if/when I have the money