Once data has been selected and appraised for curation, it has to undergo processes for storing data. Storing Data is the process of recording data on a medium for retrieval purposes at a later instance (Sriramoju, 2019). Storing data processes involves deciding on types of storage, technical issues, data formats and metadata.
A. TYPES OF STORAGE
Information can
be stored on a specific media technology depending on cost, convenience and reliability
of a particular technology. According to Blumzon and Panescu (2019), some of
the notable media include the following:
1. Magnetic Storage
(hard disk drives (HDD), magnetic tapes)
Data is stored
using the magnetization patterns of a special surface.
2. Optical Storage (compact
disks, Blu-ray)
Data is stored
in deformities on a circular surface which can be read when being illuminated
by a laser diode.
3. Semiconductor
Storage
Data is stored
using semiconductor-based integrated circuits. Originally, a volatile storage
technology upgraded into a state of art non volatile technology with access
speeds surpassing that of magnetic technology.
Centralized Storage vs Distributed Storage
B. TECHNICAL ISSUES
Storing data has
to consider the following technical issues:
1. Redundancy
There is always
a possibility of the data or medium developing some faults rendering the data
inaccessible or useless at a later stage. As such it is wise to have clones of
the stored data on multiple storage systems.
2. Persistence and
Preservation
Stored data need
to be frequently tested for rot detection to ensure timely migration to another
medium whenever need arises.
3. Transformation
The stored data
is migrated to other medium to avoid rot and being overtaken by technology
format innovations which might render the older file formats obsolete.
C. DATA FILE FORMAT
Storing Data has
to consider the following data file format issues:
1. Proprietary Versus
Open Source File Format
Proprietary file
formats require proprietary applications and sometimes proprietary hardware
which makes interoperability of the file across systems a nightmare (Denis & Johnson, 2007). On the
other hand, open-source file formats are universal as they do not require
specific applications and hardware for access (Zeng et al., 2025).
2. Standardization
One has to consider
if a particular data file format will be followed to enhance interoperability.
D. METADATA
Metadata is data about data which facilitates the interaction with the stored data for easy interpretation (Tewfik et al., 2025). The following are types of metadata that one has to think about when storing data (Blumzon & Panescu, 2019):
It describes the
title, creators of the dataset and description/keywords of the stored data.
2. Licensing and Rights Metadata
It describes the
legal ways in which the data can be shared and reused. It includes the
copyright statement, rights holder and reuse terms
It describes data file format and size for
transfer purposes.
It provides information for checking data
integrity by providing such information as checksum or replica replacement
events.
It provides ways in which data files are
organised and their formats.
All in all, storing data should be done
with a mind of securing perpetual availability and accessibility of the
preserved data.
REFERENCES
Blumzon, C.F.I., Pănescu, A. (2019). Data Storage. In: Bespalov, A.,
Michel, M., Steckler, T. (eds) Good research practice in non-clinical
pharmacology and biomedicine: handbook of experimental pharmacology (vol. 257).
Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/164_2019_288
Denis, T. & Johnson, S. (2007). Cryptography for developers.
Syngress. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-159749104-4/50005-4.
Sriramoju, S. (2019). A comprehensive review on data storage. International
Journal of Scientific Research in Science and Technology, 6(5), (236-241). https://doi.org/10.32628/IJSRST
Tewfik, G., Chaudhry, F., Rodriguez-Correa, D., Aziz, R. &
Naftalovich, R. (2025). Metadata: how data about data affects patient safety in
anesthesia. Current Opinion in Anesthesiology, 38 (6), 786-793. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACO.0000000000001575.
Zeng, X., Meng, R., Prammer, M., McKinney, W., Patel, J. M., Pavlo, A. & Zhang, H. (2025). F3: The open-source data file format for the future. Proceedings of the Association Computing Machine on Management of Data, 245, 1-27. https://doi.org/10.1145/3749163

Well written
ReplyDeleteThis is great, and well detailed
ReplyDeleteInformative read
ReplyDeleteWell articulated, Anthony
ReplyDeleteStoring data has been well broken into chunks,with each segment well explained.This is a good job
ReplyDelete