06-17-2020, 05:02 PM
He's right.
It's time.
The time for creating has passed...
It is now the time to save.
It will take quite sometime, so begin now.
I would hope that you have been doing it all along...
But if not, start.
(06-25-2018, 06:59 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]Things like Facebook etc. won't be around in 100 years, I'm sorry. It just won't be. The whole digital progression will be like the comparison between phonographs and MP3 players by then, only with tech and concepts that are totally beyond our understanding at this time. Or, it'll be the stone ages again due to natural events (CME/EMP, etc). One or the other.
What will have promise of longevity is the WRITTEN WORD. So go ahead and make your videos, but TRANSCRIBE that material and have physical copies of it. That is absolutely the only way to ensure that it might survive.
This digital material is subject to censorship at the mere click of a button due to algorithms which look for certain words and then "disappear" your content forever if they're found... none of it is safe. If people depend on the idea that the internet in its current form (and the digital materials therein) will stand the test of time, they will be in even more danger of being lost to time than their ancestors who were featured in physical photos and newspaper clippings.
Do not depend on this digital platform to stand the test of time... it's naive and it's a dangerous belief if you ACTUALLY want to be remembered.
As much as they're dumbing down society these days, it'll be a miracle if anybody is even smart enough to read by then anyway. But as always there will still be some who are apart from the herd and are still intelligent.
The secret to hard copies is physical distribution. Don't keep it all in one place and don't hoard it for yourself. If you can get it into book form, mail it out to select places which accept random books and display them or keep them for record. There are sites which list these "open libraries"... they're all over the world. Distribute, distribute, distribute.
(06-17-2020, 05:09 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]I know pictures and videos are nice. So is music. Luckily music files are pretty small, so no problem there.
(06-17-2020, 09:38 PM)Master Oblivious Wrote: [ -> ]If something that "big" happens to "erase" things or "shut down the net" then will anyone really
care what anyone has archived?
(06-17-2020, 09:51 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]Does anybody on the face of the earth care about ancient texts?so you're comparing your works to the "ancient" writings preserved through "archive? I understand now.
Do people who decode ancient writings care about those ancient writings?
Fuck man, ya got me, I guess they don't.
I guess that's why they spent their time decoding ancient texts...
(06-17-2020, 11:12 PM)Master Oblivious Wrote: [ -> ]so you're comparing your works to the "ancient" writings preserved through "archive? I understand now.
(06-17-2020, 10:06 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]I'd be pretty damn suspicious of anyone who tries to discourage archiving... for any reason.I'd discourage anyone who also started "saving the forests" by eradication of books to digital format.
There's literally no true, legitimate argument against archiving.
It just doesn't exist.
(06-17-2020, 11:15 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]I gotchyer annalog right here, son...lmao!
(06-17-2020, 11:13 PM)Mister Obvious Wrote: [ -> ]I'm comparing EVERYONE'S WORDS to that level of importance, yes.One of my favorite scenes from that movie. He was a genius. Epic natural talent.
And there is also no argument against that being a good thing...
(06-18-2020, 12:12 AM)Dev Wrote: [ -> ]Use Linux. It doesn't have to be your main computer, but you need at least one Linux box to keep your data safe from any fuckery that Microsoft/Apple/Google/Amazon might decide to perpetrate. Practically any old computer will do. This is important because there's nothing hidden in Linux that could fuck you over.
A Linux box and a USB drive are all you need to create an automatic backup. Every Linux distro has a program called rsync for maintaining a mirror image of any directory tree on your system. You only have to copy all of the files once, then rsync will only copy files that have changed since the last time you ran it. It's easy to set up a cron task to periodically update your rsync backups.