Blue Mountain
Resident Skeptical Hobbit
Except nobody accepts digital documents, they demand paper. I'm about to buy a new car, it took me days to assemble all the necessary documents needed. Titles, tax receipts, proof of insurance, etc. And I'll end up with even more once I get the car. From the dealer, from the DMV, from the city, et al. All of whom use millions of dollars worth of computers...but print everything important and require printed everything.
In many cases paper can be more durable than computer records. See, for example, the BBC Domesday Project:
Wikipedia said:The BBC Domesday Project was a partnership between Acorn Computers, Philips, Logica and the BBC (with some funding from the European Commission's ESPRIT programme) to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book, an 11th-century census of England. It has been cited as an example of digital obsolescence on account of the physical medium used for data storage.
Less than a decade after the BBC produced the original laserdisc it was unusable because there were no devices left that could read the disc. By contrast, after 900 years the original Domesday Book is still accessible, provided one can read Latin in the old script.
Sure, computer records on a network can be accessed from pretty much everywhere, but their file formats and the programs needed to read them are subject to obsolescence.
Of cource, paper is vulnerable to fire and water. Fired clay tablets are about the best long term storage medium, or carving your message on a cliff face. [Wikipedia: Behistun Inscription]
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