Are we at risk of losing our digital history?

As the world becomes more digitalized, we are at of risk losing our history. We are saving files everywhere, often with little idea of how future generations will find them, or whether they will even have an appropriate application to open them. Most digital preservation strategies feel like the digital equivalent of the massive warehouse in Raiders of the Lost Ark -- petabytes and petabytes of information that we'll "someday" go back and sort through.

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Fathers and Baseball

On October 25, 2019, I finally made it. To my first World Series game. It was only 24,493 days after my father made it to his only World Series appearance. It took a while. As Terrence Mann said, “America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It's been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt, and erased again. But baseball has marked the time.” Yes, 24,493 days is a lot of “time marking.”

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Is this Heaven? No, It's Iowa.

According to my printed directions -- this is a pre MapQuest, pre-GPS era -- my quest is just four miles away.

“People will come, Ray. They'll come to Iowa for reasons they can't even fathom. They'll turn up your driveway not knowing for sure why they're doing it. They'll arrive at your door as innocent as children, longing for the past.”

33 Years Ago - A Reflection

I didn’t expect to wind up on an Amtrak train to New York, a week after the due date for our second child, but before child number two decided to make his formal appearance. But I also had not expected to get one of those phone calls. The late at night -- uh-oh, why is the phone ringing?-- phone calls.

Family Histories -- Sometimes It Takes a Village

What IS on my mind this Thanksgiving -- this totally weird Thanksgiving without my own family around the table -- are the family members that WERE around the table for my father after his parents disappeared in the 1930s. A village of mystery family members who undoubtedly had problems of their own, but somehow gave my father a home -- and a safety net.

Our Family Story Begins

My 9th grade English teacher, Miss Porro, used to say, “Just tell them what you’re going to tell them. Tell them. Tell them what you told them.” I realize in retrospect that this was hardly unique advice in high school English classes.