Looking for an old hard drive and thinking about physical archives
I spent most of yesterday afternoon shifting cardboard boxes around in the spare room, trying to track down an old external hard drive. I was looking for some backed-up photos and community threads from a few years ago, but so far, no luck. It is kind of unsettling how much we trust digital formats and network servers to hold our personal histories and connections. A corrupted drive or a platform update can essentially erase a decade of memories in an instant.
It makes you realize the distinct value of tangible objects that just sit in a box, completely immune to software decay. I was actually thinking about how this concept of preservation applies to highly tracked environments, like professional sports. If you pull up the digital profile for a player like Cooper Kupp online, you are just looking at dynamic data points that get overwritten and updated every single week of the season.
The digital record is inherently transient. However, the material record from that exact same era—like this physical piece of sportswear—acts as a permanent, unchanging archive. It physically occupies space and locks in a specific moment of history that a database can't replicate.
I still haven't found that silver hard drive, which probably just proves the point about digital fragility. I might just have to accept that some of those old files are gone for good and start figuring out a better way to keep physical backups of the things that actually matter.
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