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Archive for July, 2008

Data in One Place Doesn't Exist

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

This week’s guest blogger is Bill Blinn, who knows a thing or two about backing up data.

Any data that is in just one location doesn’t exist.

Why? The answer is that bad things can happen to good data. Have you ever used an existing document as the basis for a new document and then, without thinking, saved the new document using the old filename? I have. Goodbye old file, unless you have backup. I did.

Have you ever formatted one of two disk drives in a machine, thinking that you’re formatting the C drive and accidentally pointed the format gun at the head of the D drive, the one with all your data, time billing records, photos, and music? Yeah, I’ve done that, too, I’m embarrassed to admit. The only recovery is backup.

Ever have a machine just die? Been there. Done that. Recovered the data.

So far, I haven’t had a computer stolen. We did have a network-spreading virus/worm years ago when the “I Love You” messages circulated. That was May 4, 2000. We’ve become smarter since then and we’ve instituted more safeguards, but backup saved the day. A lot of people I know lost every jpg on their computer because that particular virus overwrote (among others) all jpg, jpeg, vbs, vbe, js, css, and doc files.

Files exist on fragile magnetic or optical media. The more copies you have, the less likely it is that you’ll lose something important.

Backup is an essential part of living in the computer age, yet no-one seems to take it seriously until it happens to them. I’m raising my hand here: I lost an entire novel which, though possibly not the Great American one, was nonetheless dear to me. It broke my heart. I started doing backups.

Just running whatever backup software you favor isn’t enough, either. What happens if your home or office is burned, flooded, or otherwise destroyed? Good-bye, data. Offsite backup is the only reliable solution.

It doesn’t have to be costly, either. You can keep thumb drives of important files at a friend’s house. You can exchange backup with a friend, too: store hers on your computer, she stores yours on hers. There are many creative ways to deal with the issue: the only incorrect way is to not do anything.

Back up all your files regularly, and you’ll be … beyond the elements of style!

And a Final Word on Fonts …

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

(Okay, so it probably isn’t the last word in the Grand Scheme of Things, but it is for this week, anyway…)

Thanks to Geoff Hart, whom you have encountered in these virtual pages before, you can enjoy this –– er –– humorous take on the fonts debacle.

They’re way beyond the elements of style!

Times New Roman Isn't, Either …

Monday, July 21st, 2008

When it comes to matters of typography, I am clearly a babe in the woods and sit at the feet of people such as Dick Margulis, who had this to say about my weekend post on the evils of using the Courier font:

Times New Roman was a terrible, terrible choice for a default serif font in Word–and the fact that it is the Word default font is the reason so many people use it. It was designed to be used in a narrow newspaper column (the Times of London), and as such it is a semi-condensed face. That means that with normal (default) margins on US letter-size paper, there are too many characters on a line for comfortable, extended reading.

If you’re going to recommend TNR for mss., you need to recommend, as well, that margins be bumped up to 1.5 inches. That leaves a 5.5 inch type column, and 12 point TNR is satisfactory (if boring) on that measure, because it averages 65 characters per line–close to the limit for extended reading.

However, there are much better choices, even within the default font set that installs with Word, for reading comfort.

So there it is. Times New Roman isn’t your friend, any more than Courier is; so be aware of that, and that there may be issues with your favorite font, as well.

To clarify, I’m speaking here mostly of printed documents that will be sent out as queries and proposals, not as manuscripts to be read on-screen, where one can, of course, change the font so that one can read in whatever way makes one comfortable.

Dick does add:

Oh, and I completely agree with you about Courier. I see it recommended all the time in books about submitting to agents. I even see it listed as a requirement on agent sites. But there’s really no good reason for it that I can see.

Learning about fonts (as I clearly still am) is part of being … beyond the elements of style!