The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
Ready for spring cleaning? Don't forget your computer
This publicity photo provided by Digital Life Organizing shows Allison Carter, of Atlanta, who helps clients get a handle on their digital clutter. Her company is called Digital Life Organizing. Find her online at The Professional Organizer. (AP Photo/Digital Life Organizing, LoriKay Stone)
Ask friends how many emails they have sitting in their inbox or how many photos are saved to their laptop, and don't be surprised if the numbers tally in the thousands.
Some of us have a difficult time knowing how to organize all of this digital information, from emails and documents to uploaded photos and downloaded songs. We hoard because we can: Today's computer memory can handle it, and our email providers offer seemingly infinite storage space.
Take Peggy Stempson, associate pastor at Pierre First United Methodist Church in Pierre, S.D., who hangs onto at least 4,000 emails, many of them part of long conversations with friends going back five years or more.
"They spark memories, and connect me with people and help me contact them," says Stempson, 30. "It's kind of like a diary."
All of this digital detritus is not a problem unless it interferes with your life, work or happiness, according to Tim Kasser, a psychology professor at Knox College, in Galesburg, Ill.
"If this acquisition of 'e' stuff ends up leading to a lifestyle that forces you to have less time for your family, or less time to draw or play music or run around in a park, or less time to be involved in your community, then I would say that to me is a problem," says Kasser. "I can see how that happens with electronic stuff."
Thank goodness there are experts to help extend spring cleaning to the digital realm.
Start the de-cluttering process slowly, advises Danielle Claro, editor-at-large at "Real Simple" magazine.
"If you're intimidated by it, you need someone to hold your hand — either a friend or a teenager," she says, noting that she'd probably enlist her own teen.
Allison Carter of Atlanta gets paid to help people find their way through the digital morass. She helps clients streamline emails, organize finances, manage documents and photos, and back it all up.
"The digital world, it's about finding things, making your life more efficient, enjoying things, rather than having them only live in the darkness of your hard drive," says Carter, whose business is called Digital Life Organizing.
Controlling the email torrent is often the most daunting challenge, she says.
"I like my active to-do's and ongoing projects to be in my inbox until I've tackled them," says Carter, but that's all that should be there.
For important emails, she recommends setting up action reminders, and recommends Google's free online calendar. Others include Zoho Calendar and the Cozi Family Organizer, which also are free.
Gmail users can retrieve unread emails by typing "is:unread" into the search field, then delete ignored emails in large chunks. That's a favourite Claro tip.
"It was a great, great feeling. It was like doing a juice fast or something," she says.
Carter likes the app Remember the Milk for managing tasks online. Manage your family's activities via Cozi. Or link everything — email, calendars, reminders and more — with a system that pulls all of your work and home life activities into one online site, such as at IQTELL.
"That's the wave that's coming next," says Carter. "You're going to have a place to have it all in one spot."
And that one spot? Well, it's not on your computer. Rather, it's on a remote public server — what's referred to as "the cloud."
Two free, cloud-based sites that may help unclog your inbox and desktop are Springpad and Evernote, says Carter. Users can store notes, recipes, photos, newspaper articles — even snapshots of web pages.
"Bookmarks are outdated," says Carter.
Keep track of important documents at File This, and receive notifications of bills and automatically pay them — reducing emails, she says.
Shawn Whyte, an information technology consultant in Helena, Mont., recently moved thousands of documents, songs, books and photos from six old computers and personal laptops to a newer one with monster memory (2 TB, or terabytes).
Her favourite tip? If you're a Google gmail user, view and manage your emails through Microsoft Outlook. If you have other email accounts, they all can be viewed via Outlook. It's a time-saver, says Whyte.
"You can sort and move 200 emails at once," she says. "I sorted and deleted 5,000 emails in 3 hours."
Google it, says Whyte, to find out how to configure an Outlook gmail account. An alternative is Mozilla's Thunderbird.
Some photo-saving tips: Get a program, such as Snapfish, Shutterfly, Google's Picasa or others, to edit, store and share your photos, says Carter. Use Linea to organize your images fast. Use the app Lost Photos to dig up images forgotten in long-ago emails.
"Don't get hung up on being perfect or being orderly," says Carter. "They don't even have to be in time order to enjoy them. It's fun to have them mixed up: You can see how people change."
Finally, says Carter, you have to back up your computer to protect all those emails, photos and documents from suddenly disappearing. She likes CrashPlan, Carbonite and Mozy, which are online, cloud-storing, backup services.
"Having things in the cloud is really going to change things in the next generation," says Carter. "Older folks, we're not used to it. We're leery of it."
Your information in the cloud can be encrypted, says Whyte, and only you can see it.
"It's good to be concerned about privacy, but not so much that it hinders you," she says. "There are reputable companies out there that are good at this."
If your busy life has room for only one digital change, let it be protecting your data.
"Keep your data safe and back it up," says Whyte.
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
There are no comments at the moment. Be the first to post a comment below.
Post Your Comment
The Brandon Sun does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. Comments are moderated before publication. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
- Back to Top
- Return to Lifestyles Breaking News
Most Popular
- Family safe after home burns
- Big fine for tax-evading Dauphin pharmacy
- Driver passed out at red light faces drunk driving charge
- Crash victims lived life to fullest
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Drugs found on wanted man
- Blaze claims home, truck; camper saved
- Work on new gym, child-care facility to begin soon
- Sifton reeve not impressed with RDI study
- Second teen arrested after sawed-off shotgun seized
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Crash victim 'good guy': principal
- Crash victims lived life to fullest
- Pickup driver killed in crash with semi
- Big fine for tax-evading Dauphin pharmacy
- Family safe after home burns
- Man killed in highway crash was Brandonite
- New shopping centre in mix
- Brandon man caught breaking political donations rule
- Teen girl may have been sexually assaulted
- Pickup driver killed in crash with semi
- Man killed in highway crash was Brandonite
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- It's official: WestJet lands in Brandon on Sept. 3
- Crash victim 'good guy': principal
- Woman killed after crash with semi
- Highway crash turns deadly
- Crash victims lived life to fullest
- Doc shut out of residency spot
- Eight Brandon girls woke up behind bars this morning
- Crash victims lived life to fullest
- Family safe after home burns
- Sifton reeve not impressed with RDI study
- WestJet announcement a game changer for city
- Crash victim 'good guy': principal
- Powwow will honour aboriginal grads
- Pickup driver killed in crash with semi
- Three impaired drivers caught overnight
- Teen girl may have been sexually assaulted
- Don't be fooled by Hamilton
- Caldwell earns praise for stance on zoning
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Trust key to maintaining democracy
- Target: Opening Day review
- Letter to the editor -- Tax cuts can create problems
- Town Centre puts brakes on free parking
- Vigilante jailed after breaking into wrong home
- Hiking PST courageous move
- AS I SEE IT - RM of Glenwood's media stunt a black eye for Manitoba
- Princess Park assault victim 'didn't have a chance'
- Tax issue could be costly for mayor
- Crunching some WestJet numbers
- Wall demolition a blow to barbershop
- Big fine for tax-evading Dauphin pharmacy
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Family safe after home burns
- Big fine for tax-evading Dauphin pharmacy
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Family safe after home burns
- Dome building looks great for its age
- Silver Star jet's 99 returns
- Lead found in Brandon water
- Crash victim 'good guy': principal
- Brandon man caught breaking political donations rule
- Helping families understand, live with NF
- New shopping centre in mix
- Big fine for tax-evading Dauphin pharmacy
- It's official: WestJet lands in Brandon on Sept. 3
- Brandon to Calgary: $300 on WestJet
- Man killed in highway crash was Brandonite
- Westman woman ID'd as victim of Portage-area crash
- Family safe after home burns
- McCrae resigns from city council
- Wife of victim and mother of suspect speaks
- Wheat Kings steal show at bantam draft
- BU grad takes reins as dean





Sort by: Newest to Oldest | Oldest to Newest | Most Popular 0 Comments
You can comment on most stories on brandonsun.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.