tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2205499917635332692.post516039710533550858..comments2023-09-29T07:40:46.298-06:00Comments on The Chart Chick: Will Your Stories Survive the Digital Age? Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2205499917635332692.post-10936504630523545222019-08-10T17:57:58.385-06:002019-08-10T17:57:58.385-06:00
It is shocking to realize that digital is great a...<br />It is shocking to realize that digital is great and can be stored for a time, however, we need to keep up with the retrieval systems as they are developed.<br />Remember the floppy disc? <br /><br /> Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2205499917635332692.post-75544181834080229762019-08-09T00:44:22.497-06:002019-08-09T00:44:22.497-06:00Food for thought, thank you. I have added instruct...Food for thought, thank you. I have added instructions about my digital photos online to my estate planning binder and when I change any passwords, I update my Word chart, which is itself password protected. My family knows how and where it is stored. I back up it and a few other crucial files not only to my One Drive account but to a thumb drive I keep in my purse, in case of a fire at home. I keep one more thumb drive with the same info in my desk at work. I have 400 years of genealogy records to protect! Not all are on Family Search yet, but that is my goal.Carol Faye in Utahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17337212923662640187noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2205499917635332692.post-91323836056739879472019-08-08T11:09:00.035-06:002019-08-08T11:09:00.035-06:00Well, in my case, record survival will not matter ...Well, in my case, record survival will not matter since I have no descendantsdragonswinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14035693283398571243noreply@blogger.com