Where the hell did I save it?!?
Have you ever found yourself banging your head against your desk, or grabbing your mouse to propel at the nearest wall because it is 5 minutes until your next meeting and you can't find the file you need for the presentation? How about being asked by your wife to print the registration form from your kid's school for registration that is due in 2 hours and not remembering where you saved it? These situations occur far too often and I hear the stories every day about people's frustrations with how dis-organized computers can become. The truth of the matter is, no matter how powerful computers are, they will never take responsibility for managing your files. Only you can do that. There is help however. There are numerous tricks and secrets that you can implement that will save you not only time, but your sanity if you simply take the time to create a system that works for you. This post has taken me years to develop, only because it has taken me years of frustration and mistakes to develop, what I feel to be the best way of managing your life on your computer. Well maybe not the best way for you, but it serves me just fine and I call it the "Tamer" method, because I had to tame the beast that was my digital life.
- “The Swinger” - People who like to traverse in and out of folders in the hierarchy of their directory. Like monkeys swinging through trees, they hop from one folder to another, virtually up and down their file tree without knowing exactly where to find what they are looking for. They have a destination clearly in their mind, but have no idea where within the jumbled mess of files and folders to find it.
- “The Adventurer” - These individuals don’t really care where they put things because with services like Desktop search on Windows and Spotlight on the Mac, simply searching for files and folders seems to be a rather productive way to look for things.
- “The Control-Freak” This would be me. It is more of a next level approach to being a “Swinger,” meaning that you still rely on the file/folder hierarchy to get to the file or folder you are looking for, but you construct the forest with bread crumbs to guide you to the specific tree you want.
This is where I have seen people struggle and honestly, butcher more than any other aspect of making life on computers easier. It is what you call a file. Obviously, people want to give files names based on topic, subject or whatever and there is nothing wrong with that. Where it gets complicated is when you are not simply creating a file, saving it and never doing another file like it again. Right, if only life were that simple. The truth of the matter is, we are always updating, customizing, sharing and doing things to files that require a bit more control. For that we were given versioning. Multiple snapshots of a file in time that allow you to roll back to previous versions if you ever needed to. Versioning is great in theory, but the reality is, we all don’t have a true Document Management system running on our home machines that will automatically handle the versioning process for us. So what do we do? We create copies of files. Nothing wrong with that right? Well aside from the problem of having creating spawn files from the original scattered everywhere, how do you name them? Again creating an additional burden of trying to find a file that you need or more relevant, finding a file that is the latest version or copy? Again there are a couple of ways to do this. Name first please – This is the more popular way of doing it. You start with the name/subject/title of the file followed by a dash or space than a date or name of the person who just edited it. Personally I think it makes more sense to use the date. But you can’t use the forward slash so you have to cram all of the date numbers together like this 10252010 or using dashes again or periods like this 10.25.2010. That’s too many periods when you end up with another for the file extension. Version number please – Similar to name first please, this simply replaces the date at the end with a self-invented versioning scheme. Things like 1a, 1b, 1c… or 2a, 2b, 2c… appended after the title of the file:
Filesubject-v11b.xls
I did it my way…
I have spent years struggling with the numerous ways of trying to remain organized in both an enterprise environment as well as my own home computing environment. What I have developed works for me just fine and on top of that allows me to sync or move files between the two and keep everything right where I know it is. As I mentioned previously, I am the “Control-Freak” type, meaning that I like a very ordered, standardized file structure that assists me through folder names by guiding me towards the purpose of the file I am looking for. For example, If I am looking for a Performance Evaluation on me from 2001, My folders guide me there.
DOCUMENTS/WORK/ADMIN/HR/PERFORMANC EVALUATIONS/
DOCMENTS/WORK/INFRASTRUCTURE/PROJECTS/Database Project/
DOCUMENTS/WORK/00-ADMIN DOCUMENTS/WORK/01-COMMUNICATIONS DOCUMENTS/WORK/02-PRESENTATIONS DOCUMENTS/WORK/03-REPORTING DOCUMENTS/WORK/04-TRAVEL
20100216_this_is_a_file.xls