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by jsilence
4539 days ago
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While I agree with your general approach, I have to slightly disagree with your statement that photos are all we have from our life. For my own part, I'm preferring savouring the moment over taking a picture. I have experienced lovely moments, being in nature with friends, experiencing a stunning sunset, when the moment was ruined by some who were more occupied taking selfies with "we're so awsome!" faces. I prefer moment and memory over photo. Then I inherited a couple of albums of photos from my mother when she died (long ago). A lot of pictures of flowers and landscapes none of which is in itself beautiful enough to be of any purpose for me. And a lot of pictures from her friends, most of which I actually do not know or have contact to. Most of my paper based photos were accidentally ruined by mold in a wet cellar. I was very annoyed when I discovered it, but then I realized that the pictures sat there for years without being looked at anyway. I was forced to let go. And in the end it was okay. That said, after all, I recommend to everyone what you said: Make f*#@in' backups fer chryslers sake! |
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I'm doing everything I can to make sure that they will be able to see what their life was like growing up.
I literally feel like an archivist at times. I go through a lot of trouble to document and preserve their life so they have something to look back on.
1) Photos and videos ... I have a local and cloud copy of them all [1].
2) Notes I send via email to addresses currently hosted on GMail but at an email address at my domain (looking for a better solution in terms of ownership on this)
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7062209