Monday, January 20, 2025

After seeing the LA fires, it should make us all think about remote backups

Last week was complete devastation down in Southern California, with fires burning out of control. This reminded me of the fires up here in Northern California a couple of years ago. It is so sad to see so much destruction and the loss of so many memories. This made me think about family photos and the importance of keeping them safe. 

I highly recommend that you take your most important photos and get them into digital format (if they are not already digital images) and having them stored offsite. For offsite storage, you could use a cloud service like Dropbox, Google Drive, iCloud or many other offerings, or create your own solution. 

When both of my parents passed away, I took their wedding album and took photos of each of the black and white images. I then put all those images into a Dropbox folder so that my brother and sister could have them as well. Since they are in the cloud, I know that they will always be available.

I also went through all of my father's slides and scanned the best of the old photos to keep and share with my siblings. 

Speaking of my siblings, here is a photo of my brother, myself and my sister from 1966. I scanned many slides and then cleaned them up in Photoshop to remove the dust and distractions. 


Here is a photo of me holding a box of Kodak film in 1964. I guess I was always destined to be a photographer. 😀


Here is a photo I took of my son playing with my Mac way back in 1997 (and now he is a photographer too.) This photo and every photo I have taken since the early 1990s are stored on my QNAP NAS drive which gives me some peace of mind. But in order for me to feel that they are ultimately safe, I want them stored in a remote location as well. 

For those of you who have read the blog for a long time, you may recall that I have a redundant QNAP NAS drive located hundreds of miles from my home. They synchronize every day at 1am to make sure that every photo is in multiple places. I currently have more than 2 million photos stored in both locations.

I not only keep my photos stored in numerous places, but all my important documents are saved on these drives and in the cloud.

Regardless of whether you are a professional photographer, a photo enthusiast, or just someone trying to keep important photos and documents safe, I highly encourage you to have those files in more than one location, and far enough from each other to withstand mass destruction like we are seeing more often these days.

My thoughts go out to all those affected by the Los Angeles fires. 


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