- cross-posted to:
- wholesome@reddthat.com
- cross-posted to:
- wholesome@reddthat.com
Some squirrel is going to have the time of his life when he gets that candy.
Zoomie zoomie zoomie snoooze
What if someone takes the disc, copies it, and returns it. Who do we prosecute??
No one, help them make more copies so everyone gets their own.
Joe Kelly
Either that or Joe Mama
I love it
But also those ants are gonna have a sweet movie night
Won’t the heat, cold, and humidity destroy the tapes and CDs?
Not sure about VHS tapes (I dont think there are any here anyway) but discs will be fine the data is physical ridges in the plastic so unless it melts or bends you can read it.
CDs are apparently some of the most resilient storage media commonly found today.
DVDs (and presumably BluRays) less so due to the higher data density. Rewritable less again, as those use a metal alloy for the bumps and ridges.The thick plastic player with the ridges is pretty resilient, but above that is a reflective layer for the laser, and a protective lacquer layer (often printed on). If those layers get damaged and delaminate due to harsh handling, UV / heat, and / or moisture getting between them then the laser will have difficulties focusing and thus reading a disc.
Should still last years in such an exposed public free library setting where long-term preservation is probably not a goal, and get way more use out of them than sitting in personal closets where they’d last longer.
No but the heat will destroy those Chocolates
my thought. not sure how well its going to do height of winter and summer and storms and such.
These are all over the Alps, but with books. Some of the books get a little faded when it’s really hot but that’s only if they’re really boring books that nobody wants :)
Our temps go from -20 to +35
books I think are hardier. I was thinking this would be nice if they would put it in a covered public space. Our library managed one at the train station which was across the street from it. It was a bookshelf in the station itself so was protected from the elements. It was a take/leave with an option to never return something a little donate if you will tin. It was basically what they did with old books or donated books they could not add to the collection. Some old were in good condition as they would buy many copies of popular books and when it waned pair down to a few or just one copy depending.
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In my country not even the wooden post would be left there after a week 😔
There’s so many of those libraries in my little town, this is great too.
Looks like late October to early December weather depending on where in Canada. Should be mostly fine on the bugs front.
For those who are already free of physical media: leaving them in a small enclosure like this in the sun will probably destroy them in the summer. DVDs and Blurays dont take lightly to extreme heat afaik.
I saw something like this in covington, Kentucky just south of Cincinnati. Apparently there is a small movement https://www.freeblockbuster.org/
We have one of those around the corner, never anything new in it tho :/
Be the change you want to see in the world.
Ants??!
I don’t see it, but the resolution’s too low to read some of the titles.
It’s okay, no one will be watching it either way.
🤣
Alright, you got me with that one
Okay that’s pretty fucking cool I wanna steal it. The idea I mean, not the movies
Meh, junk…junk…jun—EXCALIBURRRR!
I also have both those family guy box sets. They were super cheap on a couple black Fridays, like way back in the day.
Take every video and replace them with copies of morbius