>>513402612 (OP)Because we will disagree on everything raising a child with parents from 2 different cultures.
Everything.
It's certainly a "con" to consider before letting your chick become your nose for life and owing 25+ years worth of child support. Etc etc
20% of the average monthly pay for your skull set, regardless of what you actually do, accumulating to be taken out of your paycheck before you even get it, in some cases.
Etc
for the 1st anchor.
2nd in, iirc, 10% more, assuming the same mother of course.
And etc etc
This is the topic that Man Bro, Joe Rogan, Free Speech Man, doesn't allow on his show. Lol.
No shit.
But yeah he's legit and want selected as safe and essentially a controlled opposition whether he knows it or not
Etc etc
Hard drives (HDDs): average lifespan 5-10 years. Vulnerable to drops, power surges, mechanical failure, and moisture/mold.
Solid state drives (SSDs): generally 10-15 years if powered and used, but unpowered NAND can start losing data in as little as 5-10 years.
USB/thumb drives: consumer-grade flash storage,
similar to SSDs, but often less reliable. Not recommended for long-term archival - failure can occur unpredictably.
Burned DVDs (standard, not archival M-DISC/Blu-ray): if stored properly (cool, dark, low humidity, minimal handling), can last 20-50 years. They are inexpensive, widely available, and don't rely on continuous power.
Cost factor: DVDs are far cheaper per copy than HDDs or SSDs. While cost per gigabyte is higher, redundancy is easy - multiple discs can be burned and stored in different locations for very little money.
Reliability edge: HDDs and SSDs fail all at once if the device dies, everything on it is lost. With DVDs, failure is usually limited to a single disc, and the rest remain readable.
Best practice: burn multiple DVD copies, label clearly, and store them in separate, cool, dry places. Refresh (reburn) every few decades if the data matters.
.
.
.
Anyhow:
Open-Slum.org