A Personal Exploration of Digital History

A unique perspective on the expanding topic of the digital past.
A Personal Exploration of Digital History

Preservation of my Final Project

As most of you readers may know (since you are likely my classmates), that last post was my final project. One thing I forgot, however, was how I am planning to preserve it. To keep my work safe for years to come, I plan on creating a version of this slideshow on Google Drive which will allow me to access it with my gmail log in information (with a strong password that I use specifically for that account which does not use any known words) on any computer with internet access. This, in combination with the copies I have saved on my computer and on my flash drive, creates a situation where I am unlikely to lose all versions before being able to make an additional copy if necessary. In addition to the PowerPoint document I have on my computer, I also have screenshots of the slides. This means if the screenshots get deleted or if the file becomes corrupted I will still have access to my visualizations. Additionally, this means two different file types in case one becomes obsolete. While I am not interested in going as far as partitioning my hard drive to preserve this for the future, I would like to still access it later. That said, if I really wanted to cover all possibilities, I could always turn to the tried and true method of printing it to create an analog copy of the sort that has provided us centuries of history – though certainly against the spirit of turning the past digital!

Just remember, LOCKSS keep our digital files safe!

(Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe!)

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