Arent we suppose to make things easier for the future generation incase if we completely collapse and seize to exist with no trace to be found of the technological enhancement of current age how a normal human surviving in those would be able to decode this
@bigbraingaymer Mar 1, 2026
For anyone whoβs curious. One trillion of a second is one picosecond. Light travels about 0.3 millimeters (about a thickness of a credit card) in one picosecond.
@bogo2666 Mar 1, 2026
Really helps when an earthquake happens
@ravendouglas8506 Mar 1, 2026
Isnt glass a liquid? Over time it drips
@John-cf5im Mar 1, 2026
Awesome. Totally awesome.
@billjohnston882 Mar 1, 2026
What is the re-write capability?
Media that retains info for decades seems useful for companies but 1,000s of years is more of a trivia thing.
Maybe the Mormons or Scientologists would want the extreme time line.
@FvckumzSh1ttu5 Mar 1, 2026
And then you drop it 2 feet
@user-xe2ek1td1x Mar 1, 2026
Only silica glass is technically liquid and slowly morphs over the years. So it will corrupt the data long before 10,000 years