Blessed are the digitally organized, for they shall retrieve their files.
Ever since we entered the information age, all manner of experts, social
commentators, and cultural pundits have been bemoaning the reality and
supposed
consequences of “information overload.” Few, if any, argue that the
“steady stream” metaphor (i.e., the sheer quantity and pace of data,
text, audio, video, and communication that fl ows into our lives) could
be
upgraded to the more accurate “gargantuan gusher” metaphor.
With the proliferation of downloadable video Web sites, Napster-like fi le
sharing programs, online music and movie sales by iTunes and dozens of
wannabes, free downloadable software programs and utilities, personalized
RRS
feeds, the exploding blogosphere, audio and video podcasts, the
incessant onslaught of incoming e-mails and their accompanying
attachments — not to mention our ever-expanding library of
self-generated Word documents, graphics, video footage, PDFs, digital
document scans, Photoshop files, digital cameras and their resulting
mega-pixel digital photos (plus those annoying “I
don’t-usually-forward-emails-like-this-but-you-gottasee-this-one”
e-mails from your so-called friends)— our computer hard drives are
becoming virtual landscapes littered with debris, clutter, and chaos.
Whew!
For 95 percent of what gushes into our lives via the computer, our friendly
neighborhood delete key will do just fi ne, thank you. But what about the
Sometimes
overwhelming task (or is it a full-time job?) of storing, organizing,
and actually retrieving those myriad bits, bytes, graphics, and
gigs of data amassing on your once-spacious hard drive? Honestly, what are
the
chances of you quickly fi nding that perfect photo, video clip, or
illustration you downloaded six months ago “for such a youth talk as
this”?
The following are some ideas for managing the most common types of digital data flooding our ministries and lives.
Photos
Obtain (and actually use) one of several commercially available (or free)
photo-management
software solutions such as Adobe Photoshop Elements ($99) or Google
“photo management software.” The killer app of these, uhh, apps is that
you can assign several unique, searchable, user-defined “tags” to every
digital photo. For example, that group shot of you with five of your students
at their high school graduation could be initially filed in a folder
named Graduation 2007, but the picture itself could be tagged with your
name, the names of the five students, the name of the school, the
date, and/or key words such as graduation, spring, etc. The idea being
that once you have all your photos tagged (and continue adding tags to
new photos), you can quickly and easily retrieve all the photos on your
entire computer tagged with specific words you enter in a search. Sweet.
Music
As
with photos, every song on your computer, assuming it has a
“meaningful” file name (i.e., name of the song and not simply
song1.mp3), is highly searchable (and therefore retrievable). But you
must lay this foundation for easy retrieval by staying on top of naming
and organizing new music as it’s acquired. For most of us, music is the
data type we do the best at managing.
Video
An important
complement to whatever file structure I use for organizing video clips
on my computer is a topical index of video clips created in a Word
document (or spreadsheet or database file). This index allows me to
easily find all my video clips on any topic—family, peer pressure,
media, dating, balding, and the rest of youth ministry’s usual-suspect
list of topics. In this alphabetical topical video index I include the
title of the clip, the DVD on which it’s recorded (all my DVDs are
numbered), clip length, related Scriptures, and related topics. If the
clip exists solely on my hard drive, I’ll list the computer on which
it’s stored along with its exact file path
(C:VIDEOS/SermonSpice/Resurrection Morning.wmv).
Presentations
This
is where it’s absolutely crucial to file and store consistently, so
think carefully before running off with the first “solution” that comes
to mind. For example, each of my MediaShout (or EasyWorship or
PowerPoint) presentations contain original elements that I or someone
in our ministry
created with graphics, video clips, music, plus any number of song, lyric,
and
Scripture backgrounds. So here’s the 64,000 megabyte question: Do you
store all of these different types of media in a “project” folder for
that
presentation—or do you store them in their respective folders
by fi le type (i.e., all video clips in one folder, background graphics
in another folder, music in yet another, etc.)?
Finally...
Whatever storage styles you’re considering, decide on a system and stick to
it.
My own data downfalls have come when I gave in to the temptation to
bend the rules in regard to how I manage specific forms of data on my
computer. Not pretty. With the abundance of cheap and free photo
management solutions combined with a bit of digital diligence on our
part, there’s really no need to make the difficult decision to leave
the 99 gigs of data in search of that one lost gig. Don’t let “I once
was found but now am lost!” be your digital data’s lonely lament. And
remember: If you can’t find it, you don’t have it.