At Home with Tech

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My Biggest Discoveries I Blogged About over the Past Year

Here’s my At Home with Tech year in review. Below are the links to my key learnings and tech discoveries.

So yes, these next few weeks can all be about looking forward. The fresh start. The resolutions. The turning over a new leaf. But I like to think of this time of year as the next chapter that builds on the past. It’s not so much ‘the new’… as ‘the next.’

I try to carry it forward. That way, I can greet these annual cycles with the perspective of my past years’ experiences. Said another way, it’s important to look back as you look forward. Otherwise, a lot can get lost across the years.

That’s why I think it’s critical to package up the story of your past year in an organized photo collection (digital or book) or perhaps an edited video-clips overview.

You might also want to perform a mental review and acknowledgement of your other notable actions and learnings.

Take it in. Then lock it in, or let it go if need be.

At Home with Tech Year in Review

As you know, I document my thoughts on technology and family life each week. So, I’ll follow my own advice and offer this summary of my blog posts that reflect my big learnings across the past year. Please check out the links below that most interest you!

My Growth as a Parent

Working in our Post-Pandemic World

My Journey as the Family Photographer

My Role as the Family Archivist

How a tiny film-to-digital converter brought new life to my father’s old analog slides
How to quickly turn a scanned negative into a positive image on a Mac
How to use SmugMug as a family photo archiving tool
How to prevent your family’s identity from being washed away by time

Maximizing your Family Video Clips

My Family Vacation Tips

Best Practices for your iPhone

My Evolving Understanding of Apple Computers

Here’s to a Prosperous 2024
As always, thank you for reading my blog. I’m looking forward to sharing more with you in the year to come.

Happy New Year!

5 Ways to Quickly Free Yourself from the Shackles of Digital Clutter

Is your digital life a bit of a disorganized mess? The best gift you can give yourself is carving out time to get it back in recognizable order.

You’ve got it all done. For your family, friends and work. Another year. Congratulations. Everyone says it’s now time to take a break and recharge. Relax!

But if you’re like me, you might be experiencing a certain unease… an uncomfortable itch. It’s like that feeling when you know you’ve forgotten something, but you can’t remember what. But this time, you do. And you’ve continued to put it off, because there’s always something else more pressing.

Now, you hear this nagging inner voice that whispers. It says, “Do it. Do it now. You’ve finally got time.”

Of course, we’re taking about handling all the digital disorganization that piles up throughout the year in the invisible but very real corners of your life. No one else can see it. But you know it’s there. Sure, you’ve been able to operate around it, but it’s ever heavy, and it weighs on you.

The Journey to Digital Zen
Do you want to feel refreshed? Recharged? Really ready for the year ahead? It’s time to invest in a little digital housecleaning. Start the journey to digital Zen.*
Now is the perfect opportunity, as you might have a little more free time in your day.

Here are five areas that I bet could really use your attention right now:

#1
Organize your Digital Photos from the Past Year
Whether your pictures live on your smartphone or computer (or both), if you haven’t yet finished going through this year’s crop and completing your photo-management process (physical albums/online albums/digital photo frames), it’s going to be too late.
Sure, you can tell yourself that you’ll eventually get to them, but they’ll likely get left behind, as your newer photos demand your attention.

#2
Delete All those Emails You Don’t Need
Can’t find that email from last week you want to refer to? It could be due to those thousands of disorganized emails that are cluttering up your inbox. It’s time to get rid of most of them and move the other ones into organized folders!
And don’t forget to also clear out your Junk Email folder (but not before you review it to confirm that real emails haven’t been errantly sucked in).

#3
Remove Old Photos and Videos from your Camera’s Memory Card
If you happen to still use a separate camera, I bet its memory card is looking mighty full. Do you often find yourself frantically trying to delete enough files at the last minute before you need to use your camera? (Yes, that’s me.) It’s time to make that problem go away. Go through that memory card and really free it up!

#4
Clear Out your Unnecessary Cloud Storage
Speaking of memory limits, I bet you’re paying more for your cloud storage these days. Sure, the cloud holds much more than a memory card, but it still has its own limits. Do you really need everything that’s currently in your Dropbox account or iCloud drive?

#5
Slim Down What’s Stored on your Computer’s Internal Drive
Not to be repetitive, but I bet your computer suffers from the same storage woes. Look, you just can’t save everything on your internal drive. And now that newer internal computer drives are the more-pricey SSDs, your current computer probably has less internal storage than your last one.

Gone are the days that you can simply upgrade to your next computer with double the capacity to keep up with your needs.

Portable Drives are Not a Permanent Solution
Yes, you can solve some of these problems by picking up reasonably priced portable drives and archiving your digital life onto them. But hoarding external drives and redirecting your disorganized digital content onto them is simply kicking the virtual can down the road.
What are you going to do a decade from now when you open your closet door, and you spot fifty drives in the back corner? That’s right. You’re going to close the door.

Game over.

The Limits of your Digital Life
Wait. Take a deep breath. Now exhale.

We’re all dealing with the same challenges. In fact, we’re really the first generation to go through this.

The reality is you can’t carry around a record of your complete digital existence throughout your life. We’re only a few decades into this challenge, and I feel we’ve already reached certain limits. Our kids are going to have to figure out how to handle three to four times as much!

But I’m getting ahead of myself. For now, let’s just do what we can. If it’s only a quick fix, that’s okay.

A digital band-aid is better than nothing to slow the hemorrhaging.

The Road to Freedom
Ongoing file organization and strategic file deletion should be part of any long-term strategy for a healthy digital life. And ultimately, as in the physical world, less is more. Clutter in any form is a real drag.

If you invest some time every few months to keep your digital life in order, you’ll likely feel more control over your entire life.

And especially during this time of year, I say why not invest in yourself and start to free yourself from the shackles of all that digital clutter?
You’ll be happy you did!

*I generated my photos for this blog post via Adobe Firefly.

Why the Worst Gift is the Best Gift for Yankee Swap

Don’t get angry the next time you’re stuck with a terrible Yankee Swap gift. Here’s how to even the odds for a happier outcome.

Many years ago, when I lived in Massachusetts, I learned about the fun but sometimes-unsettling holiday party game of Yankee Swap. Also known as Secret Santa, it’s essentially a group gifting game. But really, it’s a forced gift swap/stealing game. The item you choose is rarely the gift you end up with, because someone else can take it from you!

You can play it with family or work colleagues. I’ve done both, and I learned long ago that playing naughty makes the game much more fun. You just can’t allow yourself to get too attached to any of the gifts.

The Brutal Rules of Yankee Swap
Here are the basics: Everyone brings a wrapped gift, which then gets anonymously grouped with the other gifts. Often there’s a suggested gift cost, like $25-$30.

Participants pick numbers out of a hat and then each person gets their turn to choose a wrapped gift and unwrap it in front of the group. Then, they have the option to swap it with an already unwrapped gift that someone else has chosen.

Said another way, everyone gets their moment to steal away someone else’s gift. (Well, that’s not true for the first person to go.) And as you would expect, the last person can do the final swap. So that’s the best position to be in. (The number you choose matters in how well you can do in the game.)

The Ultimate Turkey
Obviously certain gifts appeal to different people. That said, there’s usually that one item that everyone wants and a couple that are stinkers.

Usually, a stinker is one that’s average and uninspired. Sometimes it’s a clear regifting moment. But one year from my Massachusetts days, I got inspired by a real stinker gift. It was hardly boring.

It was a 15lb frozen turkey! How absurdly wonderful was that? Everyone’s jaws dropped.

Sure… I suppose anyone could use a frozen turkey, unless you’re a vegetarian, but it’s a terrible gift… the ultimate turkey.

But it was still the star of the show. Everyone couldn’t stop talking about it for days.

You Can’t Stop Me
From that year on as I play the game, I’ve been drawn to the art of providing the perfect terrible gift. It wasn’t from a mean intent. Rather it was designed to maximize the fun.

But there were two problems with my strategy. First, my extended family eventually figured out my handiwork, and I got the reputation as a wacky gift giver. And then as a group response to repel my disruptive play, I would often end up with my own rotten gift. How ironic.

So, then I evolved my terrible gift choices to items that I actually liked, even if nobody else did.

I Like Terrible!
Here are a few examples of my past Yankee Swap gifts:

  • Star Wars Light Saber BBQ Grill Tongs
  • Red Lumberjack Winter Hat
  • Giant Angry Bird plush toy (This one was an unexpected hit.)
  • Huge diamond paperweight

Certainly, it’s an eclectic list. Not for everyone. That’s the point.

But I eliminated the downside, because I would still be okay being stuck with my own terrible gift.

Ho Ho Ho
So, the next time you go shopping for an upcoming Yankee Swap party, if you aren’t inspired to find a great gift, go in the opposite direction. Choose the absurd.

If it raises eyebrows, you’ve succeeded.

And if the swapping process brings it back to you, this worst gift will still bring you some holiday joy. I say that’s how to play Yankee Swap!