That depends on the aim. The purpose of something determines how fitting the means are.
Also, let us not confuse "relative" with "not objective". My father is objectively my father, but he is objectively not your father.
That depends on the aim. The purpose of something determines how fitting the means are.
Also, let us not confuse "relative" with "not objective". My father is objectively my father, but he is objectively not your father.
I'm frequently bothered by misuse of "objective" but I stand by it here. In the case of storage, one criterion supersedes all others: can you get the information back out? If you can then there are merits to discuss relative to use case. If you can't then your storage mechanism is broken.