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Posted

Second @WillowDarkling to not rely on AFF or any other archive to retain your stories w/o incident.  Keep in mind most archives, even google drive/dropbox/onedrive retain the right to *DELETE* your postings/files in their terms of service.

OTOH, I’ll make copies of copies and I’m stuck wondering “which one of these is current?”

Posted
1 minute ago, BronxWench said:

Go by the saved date. :lol: 

Had this issue when I decided to go and rework my potter story.  First task, collecting them all, then I started purging the obvious duplicates.  But hey, at least I didn’t lose much.  (The *first* draft was, unfortunately, mostly lost—shame because that was the smuttiest too.)

Posted

I have copies of all my work on my hard drive, and on two separate back-up hard drives. I tend to keep all the versions, and I just date them as “Rewrite 20XX” at the end of the original title so I don’t lose my mind. :lol: 

Posted

I had this problem very early on and learned from it.

An early story that I wrote was gone because I lost the original file. But I realized that I had it on a site so I grabbed it off them.

Then the site disappeared so now I’m much more glad that I got it.

Did a similar thing with Yahoo Groups before they went under. Had one or two stories that I lost the original word file, grabbed it and made sure I had it.

Posted
2 hours ago, Sessakag said:

I have my work backed up in so many places nothing short of the planet exploding would make me lose a single piece of my work. I lost a story one time, years ago, and have been paranoid ever since.

Yeah, I lost one many years ago, too. The worst part was that it was the middle story of a trilogy.

Posted
On 12/13/2022 at 9:50 AM, WillowDarkling said:

You should always keep your stories as files on your computer. I use Word, simply because it’s what I’m used to. 

I use word and Grammarly and have a portable hard-drive. My work should survive everything but a EMP.

Posted
5 hours ago, InvidiaRed said:

I use word and Grammarly and have a portable hard-drive. My work should survive everything but a EMP.

🧨 (we need a mushroom-cloud emoji...)

My way is different because… well, I have a tendency to turn problems into software projects as well.  That’s why I write my stories as text files, annotating with a simple format what’s what (ie styles, version).  When I want to post, I run the software, telling it what which version I want (clean vs explicit for my potter story), which archive I’m posting to (FFN, AO3, or AFF), and it’ll generate HTML files suitable for posting.  Being a programming geek, I use a “makefile” to remember the command line options to be lazy/consistent.  Bit more complex than most, but I do like the results.

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