Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Clutter for the clouds

In a world where a smartphone rarely leaves your side, getting rid of material possession­s in your home doesn’t have to mean getting rid of memories

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EXEPRT: Tech writer Geoffrey A Fowler

Q I WOULD ike to aspire to the Marie Kondo method of declutteri­ng which has inspired many of us to unstuff cupboards and discard piles of belongings banished to spare rooms. But I am sentimenta­l and want to keep memories. Help? A

I think there’s a part of Kondo’s declutteri­ng process that feels out of sync with 21st century tidying up. Kondo told me: “Though digital clutter is not tangible like clutter in your home, I believe it carries the same weight.” I don’t agree. Precious memories don’t need to go into the trash. They should go online. Q

So how do I do that? I literally have thousands of photos? A

With always-on internet storage services known as the cloud, I store every photo I’ve taken – about 300 000 and counting. No, that wasn’t a typo. It costs less than about R200 per month. Q

Do you only store photos in the cloud? A The cloud is where I also keep contracts, receipts, children’s drawings, digital books, Christmas cards, things I want to buy, awesome puns, home videos and music. I can access them anywhere if there’s an internet connection through my phone, laptop, tablet or even TV. Q

Wouldn’t that make you a digital hoarder by Kondo’s standards? A

I think I am a digital maximalist. if I have to categorise myself.

Moving things to the cloud can make it easier to part with sentimenta­l items – and even get more enjoyment out of things.

Cloud providers are getting remarkably good at doing the organising for us with artificial intelligen­ce software. The digital camera is as powerful a cleaning tool as a hefty trash bag.

Q

Can you give me some ideas on how to do this? A Souvenirs: Snap, toss. Recipes: Snap, toss. I’ve even said goodbye to old clothes this way.

The problem the cloud can most help solve is piles of photos and papers.

You can buy a scanner, or Google has a free and simple Photo Scan app for phones.

Side benefit: Turning old photos to digital keeps them safe from fire, floods and further yellowing. Q Pros and cons of some of the options out there? A Apple’s iCloud charges $1

(about R13) per month for 50 gigabytes, or about 16 000 photos. It will back up a copy of everything you snap on an iPhone and keep it in designated folders on a Mac. Even better, your devices will no longer complain about running out of storage – Apple automatica­lly removes stuff stored locally when you’re getting full. The downside: Accessing iCloud files on non-Apple devices isn’t as seamless.

Google’s Photos and Drive services work best on Android phones, but also iPhones. It charges $2 per month for 100 gigabytes, and storing photos and video in a lower-quality format is free. Google Photos is generally smarter than Apple Photos. Although it is less bulletproo­f on privacy because Google is sorting through your shots on its own servers. You’ve got options. Microsoft includes 1 terabyte for subscriber­s to its Office 365 subscripti­on, and Amazon offers unlimited photo storage for Prime members.

A final recommenda­tion for shutterbug­s: Adobe’s Creative Cloud feeds directly into its Photoshop Lightroom app that’s fantastic for sophistica­ted editing. Prices start at $10 per month for a terabyte. Whichever cloud you pick, just promise you’ll keep your stuff secure by using a really good password and turning the two-factor authentica­tion option.

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