Back-up.
Eleven years ago I was a twenty year-old with a newborn. We still took pictures with film cameras and got them developed at the local pharmacy. If you lost the photos, no biggie. Just take the negatives back to the store and have them re-developed. Data is a little more tricky.
Recently my husband and I had a miscommunication. Shocking, I know, but it sometimes happens. We have been the owners of a very nice digital camera for a few years now. I thought he said he did back up the photos but he actually said he intended to. It wasn't until the drive crashed that we realized there was not a second copy. To my friends, especially you, I know you are shaking your head at me. It wasn't me. For heaven's sakes, I am homeschooling, cooking, and successfully keeping six people alive and going. Photos are not my department.
I was kind of sad when I realized that our trips to Hawaii, Paris, New York, Washington DC, and our lives in Moscow were on that drive as well as important mile markers in our kids' lives.
We brought the external hard-drive to many of our intelligent, high-tech friends who make nerdy jokes that I didn't really understand. Anyway, one of the local geeks we know recommended a company he read about in Wired magazine. Who even reads that?
So we called up Drive Savers and they gave us the protocol involved for sending our drive. We didn't have to pay any fees or commit to anything. They would wait to see if they could fix it before charging us a dime. Who does that? They called every couple of weeks to update us on the recovery process.
Good news! Today we received our drive via FedEx. It contained 12,943 photos beginning in 2006. As I copied them onto our PC, I literally watched six years of my life flash before my eyes. I had forgotten about my trip to Florida with my best friend in 2008, Hubby's trip to New York to see Old Yankees Stadium, how beautiful Sacre Coeur gleamed in the sunset, and how much my kids have actually grown. Thank you Drive Savers. Thank you Wired.
So friends, this is a commercial. Back-up your stuff. Make CDs. Load them to an online archive, because believe me, it would have been a lot easier than paying $891. And trust me, those little people in your house won't be small forever.
I ran into the same problem a few years back, but wasn't able to recover my photos. I now back up my computer every few months to save all my materials! I'm glad you were able to recover your stuff! Love and miss you all!!
ReplyDeleteWhew! I almost thought you've lost it all! I'm glad your hard drive only scared you a bit though. :) But even so, we should always take backing up seriously before it plays a joke on us. I've had a similar experience before that's why I'm saying a lot. Hahaha! Now I religiously upload files on DropBox, save on multiple flash drives, you name it! :D -->Ruby
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