Which is why you should always have a current backup of your work somewhere. Email. Check. (At least, with some documents.) Flash drive. Check. Internet storage such as Dropbox. Will do. Once I get home and get my new, non-fried computer. (Keep reading.) And the good ol' hard copy. Check. (Though, they may not all be the most current versions.)
Why am I reminding you of this? You've heard it a million times, right? I mean, come on, Brooke, even you're getting tired of hearing it.
Because accidents happen.
As I mentioned previously, I'm currently visiting my out-of-state grandparents. Yesterday, I was talking to my mom on the phone when she informed me my computer has officially fried.
Give that a moment to sink in. My. Computer. Fried.
My mother plugged a flash drive into one of the front USB ports, forgetting they don't work. Usually, nothing happens. But oh, not this time. This time it sent a power surge through my computer. Ctrl+Alt+Del was not going to fix that bad boy. So my parents unplugged it. And it now refuses to power back on.
What did I tell you? Accidents happen.
Luckily, my dad thinks the hard drive is still good. And if it isn't, I uploaded current versions of all my writing documents onto my flash drive before I left. We also have computer insurance (I didn't even know that existed let alone that we had it. Guess someone told my mom accidents happen.) which will buy me a new computer.
This accident didn't turn out so bad. Hey, I'm even going to have a computer with working front USB ports. But that doesn't mean the next one won't. Or that yours won't.
So backup your work. Now. Twice. Naw. Four times.
Good reminder. I'm going to backup my blog right now! Haven't done that in a few weeks.
ReplyDeleteOooh... blog backing up. Yeah... I've never figured out how to do that.
DeleteAhhhh! So sorry, but glad you backed up before leaving. I'm going to back up again right now. ;)
ReplyDeleteExcellent advice. I'm sorry you are having computer issues. I read your review and love it Brooke! Thank you so much for taking the time :) May all your writing come smooth and be retrievable.
ReplyDeleteAh, I'm glad to hear it, Michael. I added a paragraph today about Kathy's arm. I forgot about it last night when I was typing up the review. And I wish you the same.
DeleteWow that's terrible luck about your computer, but I'm thrilled that you backed everything up.
ReplyDeleteOnce though, I lost 40k words WHILE backing them up. I wanted to hunt down the idiot who wrote the writing program I'd trusted with my work. :-(
Yes, I've seen you talking about it on your blog. That would indeed be terrible. I think I might have cried. For an hour. Or two.
DeleteOoh, how scary. I'm glad you have backups and backup backups. May your new computer be a good one.
ReplyDeleteAh! Leave it to Brooke to remember to back it all up. I was actually just thinking about this! If this sucker decides to give out, all those embarrassing poems I wrote when I first met you are going to be gone forever. . . And I guess I should be concerned about my current stuff, too. xD
ReplyDeletelol But I'm glad you value the "embarassing" stuff, too. Personally, I liked that stuff. And it's good to value how hard you've worked to get to where you are now. So go back up your stuff!
DeleteI was prepared to give my condolences, but wow, you were prepared. Several years ago in the age of typewriters, the prolific writer Dean Wesley Smith had a house fire. The only manuscript saved was one that happened to be in a metal box.
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh. 0-0 I always have that fear that my house is going to burn down and destroy everything! Now I have a reason. I'm keeping everything in metal boxes from now on!
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