WashPost: Marie Kondo Says Throw Away Pictures, We Agree, AFTER Scanning

Geoffrey Fowler (Washington Post): “What happened when I told Marie Kondo I have a better, higher-tech method of tidying up”

Sparking Controversy Rather than “Joy”

Technology columnist, Geoffrey A. Fowler at The Washington Post reports in his consumer tech column about disagreeing with the unclutter and ‘tiding up” superstar, Marie Kondo. While it is OK to discard clothing and other household items that do not ‘spark joy’ when it comes to your decades of nostalgic photos, there is the first step. Digitize your pictures. “Precious memories don’t need to go into dusty photo albums or the trash. They should go online.”

CLICK TO READ THE WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE

“Marie Kondo argues you should only keep what sparks joy, but The Post’s Geoffrey A. Fowler says that using the cloud to keep all your things is life-changing.”

Excerpt:

But in a world where a smartphone rarely leaves your side, getting rid of material possessions doesn’t have to mean getting rid of memories. The digital camera is as powerful a cleaning tool as a Hefty 30-gallon trash bag.

Souvenirs: Snap, toss. Recipes: Snap, toss. I’ve even said goodbye to old clothes this way, such as my first concert T-shirt. (It was En Vogue, who surely would support freeing your mind of the clutter.)

The problem the cloud can most help solve is piles of photos and papers. You can buy a scanner, or Google has a free and simple Photo Scan app for phones. Easier yet: Try mail-away services that digitize photos for as little as 8 cents per photo, such as ScanMyPhotos.com and ScanCafe.com. Side benefit: Turning old photos digital keeps them safe from fire, floods, and further yellowing.

The ScanMyPhotos.com corporate headquarters in Irvine, California digitizes upwards of 300,000 each day, each one of these professional photo digitizers scans 12,000 each hour.
The prepaid fill-the-box photo scanning service holds about 1,800 photos.
1,000,000,000 pictures have been professionally preserved in this building to help unclutter your lifetime of pictures. The average household has 5,500 pre-digital pictures and there are 3 1/2 trillion still analog photos to preserve before discarding, after saving on the cloud.

Follow along to read about all the past
http://www.ScanMyPhotos.com
news profiles and reviews for why it is so vital you digitize your pictures today.

BONUS: Please join us to support journalism and journalists. They matter more than ever. If you enjoyed and learned something from this article, click to subscribe to The Washington Post