From: R.Fritz on 7 Apr 2010 10:41 With PDF creation available in Office 2007 we are thinking converting to PDF's, scanning documents to DVD for storage instead of keeping printouts. My boss is concerned about having an issue in 10 years if not being able to access these PDF documents because of new technology. My thinking if it becomes obsolete, there will be a transition time when we would know this & be able to convert to the newest technology. Does any body have comments concerning this.
From: DL on 7 Apr 2010 11:20 A pdf is not an MS format, so anything saved as a pdf can be opened by any pdf application, eg Adobe Reader If you are thinking of business storage / data backup you might find multiple backups on several separate drives more appropriate "R.Fritz" <RFritz(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:6024B9C5-6875-440D-93A8-B16E4A4B9C83(a)microsoft.com... > With PDF creation available in Office 2007 we are thinking converting to > PDF's, scanning documents to DVD for storage instead of keeping printouts. > My boss is concerned about having an issue in 10 years if not being able > to > access these PDF documents because of new technology. > > My thinking if it becomes obsolete, there will be a transition time when > we > would know this & be able to convert to the newest technology. Does any > body > have comments concerning this.
From: Steve Rindsberg on 7 Apr 2010 12:26 In article <6024B9C5-6875-440D-93A8-B16E4A4B9C83(a)microsoft.com>, R.Fritz wrote: > With PDF creation available in Office 2007 we are thinking converting to > PDF's, scanning documents to DVD for storage instead of keeping printouts. > My boss is concerned about having an issue in 10 years if not being able to > access these PDF documents because of new technology. > > My thinking if it becomes obsolete, there will be a transition time when we > would know this & be able to convert to the newest technology. Does any body > have comments concerning this. My guess is that DVDs will go obsolete before PDFs do. Now your boss has TWO things to worry about. ;-) But any technology so widely used as CDs, DVDs, PDFs or other image formats will stick around a long, long time before it's totally unusable. Look at MS Office documents, for example. It wasn't until Office 2007 that MS finally stopped allowing you to open documents created in pre-Office 97 versions. As long as you have Office 2003 or earlier, you can still open and convert versions going back to Office 4, as I recall. That's a LOT of warning time. I'd plan on having an "archive review" meeting every few years to assess the current state of things and plan for the future so you don't get caught short.
From: "db" databaseben at hotmail dot on 7 Apr 2010 13:48 I think pdf is the "standard" and is here to stay. even the judicial systems in our local and federal governments convert all the documents of court proceedings into pdf's. my suggestion is to also save a copy of the adobe reader on each dvd with the pdf's also you may want to save the doc's in their original format on other dvd's as a backup plan or need to edit the doc's for whatever reason. incidentally, not many people know this but pdf's can also be opened by adobe photo shop programs. -- db·´¯`·...¸><)))º> DatabaseBen, Retired Professional - Systems Analyst - Database Developer - Accountancy - Veteran of the Armed Forces - Microsoft Partner - @hotmail.com ~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen > > "R.Fritz" <RFritz(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:6024B9C5-6875-440D-93A8-B16E4A4B9C83(a)microsoft.com... > With PDF creation available in Office 2007 we are thinking converting to > PDF's, scanning documents to DVD for storage instead of keeping printouts. > My boss is concerned about having an issue in 10 years if not being able to > access these PDF documents because of new technology. > > My thinking if it becomes obsolete, there will be a transition time when we > would know this & be able to convert to the newest technology. Does any body > have comments concerning this.
From: Steve Rindsberg on 8 Apr 2010 21:26 > incidentally, not many people > know this but pdf's can > also be opened by adobe > photo shop programs. And for more full-featured editing, by Adobe Illustrator. And usually by Corel Draw.
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