I think not. I have had my hard-drive for five years. (I know, practically ancient for computers.) Less than a year of owning it, it crashed badly. Badly enough that I ended up calling a freelance computer technician who used to work at Microsoft, before he realized he could make much more as a freelancer. He fixed the problem. Wasn't easy, wasn't cheap. And here's the best part . . . He's been back 3 times since then. And no, not because he's incompetent. Among his clients are Fortune 500 companies. He doesn't even work on personal P.C.s much of the time anymore. As a former and repeat client, he works on mine. Everything on my computer is up to date.
So basically, every now and then it crashes for no reason at all. I'm sure there is a reason, but nothing blatant. The nice thing about paper storage is that unless some sadistic pyromaniac comes into your house, ties you up, and then forces you to watch as he one by one burns all of your documents; you're not losing all of your precious documents the way you would on a computer. One second it's there, and now it's gone! Hey, neat magic trick. Well, not really. Yeah, you can back everything up and pay for that service. But that's like wanting to buy an automatic watch because you think quartz watches aren't "real" watches. But then you buy a battery-powered watch-winder for it so the watch doesn't stop. Seems a bit silly to me.
I use my computer the way I do my T.V. and PlayStation. Entertainment only. All of my important documents aren't getting wiped out in the blink of an eye. I've kept up to date with computer technology. When it comes to reliability, computers are like Ultrafire flashlights. :thumbsdow