On building video game vaults
Apr. 4th, 2025 10:02 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
PlayStation’s extraordinary effort to preserve its game-making history
https://www.gamefile.news/p/playstations-extraordinary-effort
Fredley’s talk covered the servers and underground mineshafts he and his team are using to save builds of games and scores of other digital artifacts from PlayStation’s past. He also talked about the logistical challenges of their effort and the value of preservation.
Apparently Sony employed a team of specialists to preserve its thirty-year digital history in mineshafts near Las Vegas and Liverpool. I mean, they could just as easily open the data to public digital archives, but still. That's cool as hell.
By the way, storing data (digital or otherwise) in old mineshafts isn't as uncommon as you'd think. In fact, Elon Musk recently tried to "shut down" a big underground facility called Iron Mountain, which houses a bunch of paper records for the federal government under a tiny mining town north of Pittsburgh called Boyers. He wasn't successful of course, butI just think it would be neat if the next Silent Hill game
https://www.gamefile.news/p/playstations-extraordinary-effort
Fredley’s talk covered the servers and underground mineshafts he and his team are using to save builds of games and scores of other digital artifacts from PlayStation’s past. He also talked about the logistical challenges of their effort and the value of preservation.
Apparently Sony employed a team of specialists to preserve its thirty-year digital history in mineshafts near Las Vegas and Liverpool. I mean, they could just as easily open the data to public digital archives, but still. That's cool as hell.
By the way, storing data (digital or otherwise) in old mineshafts isn't as uncommon as you'd think. In fact, Elon Musk recently tried to "shut down" a big underground facility called Iron Mountain, which houses a bunch of paper records for the federal government under a tiny mining town north of Pittsburgh called Boyers. He wasn't successful of course, but
no subject
Date: 2025-04-04 06:40 pm (UTC)To consolidate a reply to your other comment: It is deeply fascinating to me, as someone who works in public service, how incredibly little understanding he and his army of mini Nazis have of how anything works. Typical of that kind of cishet White guy and regrettably reminiscent of my ex, but. Fascinating in a "if this weren't reality" kind of way.
no subject
Date: 2025-04-05 02:27 pm (UTC)Man, you said it. For real.
Thanks for sharing this btw! I'm too ADHD to work as an archivist myself (a fact that I unfortunately had to learn the hard way), but I'm very interested in the logistics of digitization. This is one of the many times when I wish I did MMORPGs so I could join in one of your FFXIX campaigns and be a fly on the wall while you talk about this.
no subject
Date: 2025-04-13 11:36 pm (UTC)...you see how that turned out.
(Really in a lot of ways it does not function like any other MMO I've tried; there's an enormous amount of work put in to making it possible to play most of it alone, and the focus is absolutely on the story not on Number Go Up unless you are specifically trying to play it as number go up. If you ever want to give the free trial a go, I will be happy to run around with you!)