>>513504915 (OP)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
TTCS
https://thehiddenbay.com/search/Ttc%20/1/99/0
Calvary
https://thehiddenbay.com/torrent/10 423610/Calvary_(2014)_1080p_BrRip_x264_-_YIFY
ASOIAF audiobook
https://thehiddenbay.com/torrent/84 49523/A_Song_of_Ice_and_Fire_(Audio_Books_1-5_-_Complete)
From director of Dinner with Andre, a very talkative movie we all can agree: yak yak yak
this one ? Mostly silent .
Kinda trippy
https://thehiddenbay.com/torrent/97 44158/Black_Moon_1975_BDRip_720p_x264_multisub-HighCode