Nostalgia, What’s Old is New Again at CES, Says ScanMyPhotos.com

Technology and innovations are going to be blended with nostalgia at CES, reports Mitch Goldstone, president and CEO of ScanMyPhotos.com. His Irvine-based digital imaging retail and ecommerce company has been making pictures and memories since 1990.
 

Mr. Goldstone is a regular attendee and past speaker at CES and other technology and digital imaging events. He said, “the world’s largest consumer electronics trade show, beginning on January 8th, is poised to fuse the past, analog world with today’s all digital products. With more than 3.5 trillion analog photographic pictures – representing generations of families’ historical “Kodak moments,” most have not been seen in years and all are clamoring to be digitized.”
 

Mr. Goldstone will use the CES platform to explain how to quickly and affordably preserve generations of treasured analog photo images. Once digitized, photos and other analog content can then be shared and enjoyed on many of the new, high-tech products that CES is famous for introducing.
 

To coincide with CES, the National Photo Preservation Month (NPPM) was launched by ScanMyPhotos.com to draw awareness to and showcase the obligation of protecting those special photo memories before they fade away.
 

“Using Kodak digital imaging technology, it is possible to affordably and quickly digitize all those snapshots,” explained Goldstone, founder of NPPM.
 

Goldstone said “the demand to digitize pictures is mandated by the span of time which leads many older photos to fade away or become misplaced. The month-long NPPM campaign will also help connect entire families with their past, as they revisit, share and create new ways to preserve and have fun with their snapshots.”
 

Why was the National Photo Preservation Month created?

 

The idea was sparked from National Geographic Traveler magazine’s Jan/Feb 2009 front cover headline, “Preserving Your Travel Photos” which featured a lengthy article by Scott S. Stuckey on how to make your travel photos truly timeless. Traveler’s senior photo editor, Daniel Westergren explained that “the short answer is to scan your old pictures.” This advice guided ScanMyPhotos.com to help promote making all your photo memories timeless through the establishment of NPPM to draw attention to preserving photos.
 

How to get involved with National Photo Preservation Month

 

Collect all your old (non-copyrighted) photos. Get your entire family and circle of friends involved as a treasure hunt to track down those Polaroid snapshots, shoeboxes of pictures and photos stacked away in draws and on closet shelves.
 

Use your favorite social networking website, from MySpace, Twitter, FaceBook, Blogger and others to ask your relatives and friends to find those old (non-copyrighted) school pictures, vacation shots, wedding and other special occasion photo memories.
 

Share your stories. Write to local newspapers and blog about your experience as you revisit those special photo memories. Once your photos are digitized, tag each one with descriptive messages and narratives. Write a story about who was in the picture and note something special about the person, scene or event so future generations can keep those memories alive.
 

Keep the momentum going. According to reports by ScanMyPhotos.com customers, the average household has about 5,000 photo snapshots. Once the pictures are pooled together, get it scanned. There are a variety of photo scanning services available, from independent photo imaging retail labs to high-volume, bulk scanning services like ScanMyPhotos.com
 

Share your story and ask the experts for help to preserve your photos. As part of NPPM, the ScanMyPhotos.com website is extending is free Live Support Help Desk to assist with instant answers to questions on how to preserve and digitize your photos. Profiles recounting how people are preserving their photos will be posted at “blog.ScanMyPhotos.com” and gathered to share with tech, consumer and lifestyle reporters.
 

Original article: https://finance.boston.com/boston/news/read/7575127/nostalgia