There really is no reason to lose important information if you take the time to develop a backup strategy. Here's the what, when, why and how of my backup strategies (yes, there are more than one).
When I was in high school I played a lot of golf. My buddy Ben and I begin playing as soon as the course opened until so late at night we had to listen to where the ball dropped because it had gotten so dark we couldn't see the ball in flight. Boy, those were the days!
OK, RIDICULOUS is my new word. My mother yelled at me for my limited vocabulary; so be it. But the internet is OUT OF CONTROL. I've ranted about this before, but I would like to think that my vision is becoming more focused. I would hope so, after 68 years?
I have to admit I'm a big fan of Guy Kawasaki's 10-20-30 rule of presentation. I too have had to sit through too many presentations that just made me want to kill myself. I can recall going to some presentations by Microsoft, which started the whole thing with PowerPoint, and...
I don't recall where I first heard this, but I wanted to get it down while I'm thinking about it and before I delete it from my Evernote files. All, or certainly most, problems with technology can be boiled down into three main areas and only two sources. The more you can simplify things, the easier it is to troubleshoot.
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