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Organize the boxes of your parents' stuff that you inherited&#13;
Decide which family heirlooms to keep&#13;
Donate items to museums, societies, and charities&#13;
Protect and pass on keepsakes&#13;
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Organize genealogy files and paperwork&#13;
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If you find yourself with more digital photos than you know what to do with or at a loss as to how to begin organizing them all, then Digital Asset Management (DAM) is your solution. This incredibly helpful book answers such common questions as: how should I manage the sheer volume of images? How can I make sure my pictures are safely backed-up? How can I efficiently categorize my images so that I can quickly find the one I'm seeking?&#13;
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Professional photographer and author Mike Hagen shows you how to organize, save, and back-up your digital photos by creating a filing and back-up system that are both efficient and effective. He walks you through the steps necessary to successfully maintain an orderly archiving system so that you can quickly store, save, and retrieve your images.&#13;
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    Digital Asset Management (DAM) helps you organize, save, and back-up your digital photos&#13;
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Say "so long" to your days of being a digital photo pack rat when you put this easy-to-understand, helpful book to use!&#13;
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                <text>Hagen, Mike. &lt;em&gt;Thousands of Images, Now What: Painlessly Organize, Save, and Back Up Your Digital Photos. &lt;/em&gt;Hoboken: John Wiley &amp;amp; Sons Inc.(2012). Print.</text>
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                  <text>Individual, family, and community histories are increasingly being documented and preserved on the Internet through a wide array of social media, software products, and services. Stories, images, and video are being uploaded, organized, and accessed on the Web.  &#13;
&#13;
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                <text>"Gone In a Flash?" is the recording of a digital archiving workshop conducted at Columbia University in 2012. The workshop illuminates organization and preservation practices important for individuals, especially academics, who want to make sure their work, whether textual or multimedia, is accessible in the future. The presenters emphasize the importance of writing an explicit archival policy for oneself that includes a list of items that need to be saved, as well as when, where, and how to save them. Individual items should be documented as in a professional archive so that if items are found much later, the viewer can tell where they came from, how they were created, and any software that one may need to access them. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Personal archives, like any professional archive, must be managed and maintained. One must cull them for unnecessary information, and establish a backup calendar so that three copies of the work are kept at all times and in different places. The workshop also delves into university resources, such as academic creative commons, that can help scholars by backing up the information on a fixed schedule and completing the metadata.</text>
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                <text>Since its first-edition printing in 2003, The DAM Book has become one of the standard references for photographers trying to build and protect their digital archives. In this revised edition, Krogh takes a holistic approach, outlining what he refers to as the “Digital photography ecosystem.” After explaining the theoretical aspects of developing a sound digital asset management plan, Krogh tackles the practical issues of non-destructive image editing, understanding and using metadata, the benefits of controlled vocabularies, consistent file naming, choosing the right hardware and software platforms, analyzing cataloging strategies, and finally devising a comprehensive back-up system. &#13;
&#13;
This “ecosystem” also addresses best practices in regard to the challenge of data migration and staying technologically current. The challenge, Krogh argues, is that with rapid changes in technology and the short lifecycle of media, the photographer must develop a system that will allow for longevity and expansion. The techniques in this book provide a system that is flexible, scalable over time, and adaptable to new technology when properly adhered to.</text>
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                <text>Krogh, Peter. &lt;em&gt;The DAM Book: Digital Asset Management for Photographers&lt;/em&gt;. 2nd ed. Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly, 2009. Print.</text>
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