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Backing up your story?
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Preston
(last edited May 23, 2014 02:45AM)
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May 23, 2014 02:44AM

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Dropbox, Google Drive, and on an external hard drive. You can never be too careful with these things. ;-)
I use the free storage on Amazon Cloud. It's easy to do and I back it up whenever I make changes to any of my published works or add new material to my Current Work In Progress. It's easier than in the old days, when your WIP was on a stack of typewriter paper, usually just one copy, and if your house or apartment burned down, so did your manuscript.


Remember that electronics fail or go out of date. There are music CDs now that cannot be played on modern CD players -- some change of format made them obsolete.
If you are truly anal, print out the ms. Paper is fragile, but stays legible for a long time. Make two copies minimum. Keep one yourself and mail the other to your sister in Duluth. If your house burns down she will have the copy; the odds of both your houses flooding or burning down are not high.

C.l wrote: "I have never used the cloud storage tbh I don't think I fully trust it ..."
Not sure why you wouldn't trust it, but if it's also on your computer, the likelihood of the cloud vanishing at the same time your computer crashes is minuscule. I also back up my computer every month on a flash drive, but that's not really sufficient as a WIP backup, since disasters can happen the day before your next one. Still, it's better than nothing, and it does give me two backups if my computer should fail.
Not sure why you wouldn't trust it, but if it's also on your computer, the likelihood of the cloud vanishing at the same time your computer crashes is minuscule. I also back up my computer every month on a flash drive, but that's not really sufficient as a WIP backup, since disasters can happen the day before your next one. Still, it's better than nothing, and it does give me two backups if my computer should fail.






I only wish Dropbox allowed me to save directly from my desktop to the cloud server as opposed to working on my file on the cloud server. I have a program that automatically backs up entire hard drives, so maybe I can get that to work the way I want it.


1. Original on my computer
2. Copy on my laptop via SugarSync (like Dropbox)
3. Copy in the cloud with SugarSync
4. Copy on an external harddrive (via Time Machine for Macs)
5. Copy in another service like SimpleNote or Evernote for good measure.
All except #5 is completely automated., and SugarSync and Time Machine both save revisions as well.