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Policy of Transience

46 pointsby pekim11 days ago

6 comments

spacerzasp8 days ago
I&#x27;ve consistently ran into open source projects, different kind of archives and data that I&#x27;ve just taken for granted that they are there, and subsequently been reminded that they can be taken away just like that without warning. Now I save and maintain everything that is important to me myself without relying on them existing elsewhere on someone else&#x27;s computer.<p>How does this differ from the deliberate saving mentioned in the article? I can&#x27;t reliably tell what piece of data it is that will be important, out of the whole collection maybe a couple percent has ever been called upon, but those few percent are very, very valuable.<p>How long should one maintain the copies then? Well the oldest record to still save a bit over $10K in cost is well over 30 years old data, while archiving it has only cost an aggregate of a few dozen bucks. So I&#x27;d say just don&#x27;t get rid of it.
dgunay8 days ago
I don&#x27;t delete things by default but generally everything I might care about automatically gets backed up off device. I have seen lots of stress and turmoil from people needing to get data off of their old devices and being unable to do so. At any given moment, I would be comfortable throwing my phone off a cliff, in that I wouldn&#x27;t worry about losing data. Anything of sentimental or practical value is backed up.<p>Similarly with Git, I rarely use stashes. If I have to switch contexts, anything I care about gets committed to a branch (and ideally pushed to a remote) or I blow it away.
hinkley8 days ago
I have a different policy of transience and that&#x27;s not to use my work computer to store anything important. If it&#x27;s important it should be where I can find it if my laptop takes a spill down the stairs, or by others if I win the lottery and don&#x27;t show up to work one day.<p>I was already working toward this policy when I worked at a place where an entire batch of computers came with defective hard drives that died between 24 and 30 months of first power-on. We had 6 people rebuilding their dev environments from scratch in about a 4 month period. By the time mine died more than half the setup time was just initializing whole disk encryption. Everything else was in version control or the wiki, with turn-by-turn instructions that had been tested four times already.
Aeolun8 days ago
I feel like I have the opposite. I always find that I need something I thought was transient again months later, so I have a policy of permanence. Everything gets saved&#x2F;cached somewhere, and the only time it is deleted is when the cache is full.
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AstralStorm8 days ago
The policy results in a lot of wasted effort and inefficiency.<p>Even secure systems like Tails have an option for persistence for that very reason.<p>Lack of session management is in fact annoying in the OSes, X11 protocol is generally unsupported anyway.<p>True persistence, however, is indeed in storing the scripts and advanced things in a backup archive, properly labelled. Sadly there is no good site to share these to reduce the unneeded effort.<p>Distributed archive, for that matter.
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Artoooooor8 days ago
This is actually good. I have a problem in keeping order in various areas of my life, work and even entertainment. But the things that I do keep in order (browser tabs, open files) actually use that rule. Either something is permanent by my decision or it is temporary. Thank you for sharing.