Christmas day my old MacPro 4,1 went down. Turns out it is the fan on the GPU. Setting a 5 inch 110 CFM box fan next to the card has it running tickity boo while I wait for a replacement to arrive. However that took me a few days to figure out. In the meantime I had zero access to most of the photos I have taken over the past 20 years. Despite aggressive back-up strategies I am well aware that those electrons could be scrambled at any time and my entire digital collection lost forever.
That all got me thinking again in terms of how to archive digital imagery. I am currently gradually going through old slides, negs, prints and digital images looking for those very special images. As I find them I am printing them at 8x10 or 8x12. That's about as permanent as you can get and can be easily copied or scanned to make smaller or even slightly larger prints. Most of my 4x5 stuff is being printed at 11x14.
If I were to replace that old mac I would probably go with the Mac studio, but even there external storage would be a must, and various old HDs and SSDs would need a new method of connecting to the new computer.
Long winded intro but what are you doing to make your important images permanent?
That all got me thinking again in terms of how to archive digital imagery. I am currently gradually going through old slides, negs, prints and digital images looking for those very special images. As I find them I am printing them at 8x10 or 8x12. That's about as permanent as you can get and can be easily copied or scanned to make smaller or even slightly larger prints. Most of my 4x5 stuff is being printed at 11x14.
If I were to replace that old mac I would probably go with the Mac studio, but even there external storage would be a must, and various old HDs and SSDs would need a new method of connecting to the new computer.
Long winded intro but what are you doing to make your important images permanent?