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How To Make An Electronic Survival KitSo, you've made a SurvivalKit to keep you alive until the good guys come to rescue you. Well, now you're starting life over in a new place. These are some of the things you might want to bring along. | ||||||||
How To Make An Electronic Survival Kit | ||||||||
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Electronically | ||||||||
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Our primary goal is to make our data as easy to access as possible. This is critically important when you don't know what kind of machine you may have to use to access your data. You might have a beautiful Mac or Unix workstation at home, but if you were at home and could use your computer, then the rest of this would be pointless. Regardless of what you normally use, expect to be using a Windows box to | |||||||
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Our primary goal is to make our data as easy to access as possible. This is critically important when you don't know what kind of machine you may have to use to access your data. You might have a beautiful Mac or Unix workstation at home, but if you were at home and could use your computer, then the rest of this would be pointless. Regardless of what you normally use, expect to be using a Windows box to access it. | |||||||
| First, I highly recommend that you combine your files into a single Zip file. That's because it's much easier to manage one file than 100. | ||||||||
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Second, and this is critically important, use an encryption program to put as password on the zip file! You're going to be putting a lot of sensitive information in there, so don't leave it out for any twit to find if you misplace your copy. I highly, highly recommend GNU Privacy Guard, or GPG. A FreeSoftware? package of it for Windows is available from http://www.gpg4win.org. Under no circumstances should you trust the lame "encryption" (bah!) that comes with some storage media like USB keychain drives, or like is built into WinZip?. I mean it! Use a stand-alone encryption program. | |||||||
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Second, and this is critically important, use an encryption program to put as password on the zip file! You're going to be putting a lot of sensitive information in there, so don't leave it out for any twit to find if you misplace your copy. I highly, highly recommend GNU Privacy Guard, or GPG. A FreeSoftware? package of it for Windows is available from http://www.gpg4win.org. Under no circumstances should you trust the lame "encryption" (bah!) that comes with some storage media like USB keychain drives, or such as is built into WinZip?. I mean it! Use a stand-alone encryption program. | |||||||
| Don't forget to put a copy of the installer on your backup media so that you'll be able to unlock your data when you need it! | ||||||||
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Physically | ||||||||
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A floppy ain't gonna cut it. Your encrypted zipfile will probably be much larger than will fit on a floppy disk, unless your life is so simple that this is just an academic exercize. Your four main options, in the order I'd recommend them, are: | |||||||
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A floppy ain't gonna cut it. Your encrypted zipfile will probably be much larger than will fit on a floppy disk, unless your life is so simple that this is just an academic exercise. Your four main options, in the order I'd recommend them, are: | |||||||
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-- KirkStrauser - 09 Feb 2006 | |||||||
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-- KirkStrauser - 28 Aug 2006 | |||||||
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How To Make An Electonic Survival Kit | |||||||
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How To Make An Electronic Survival Kit | |||||||
| So, you've made a SurvivalKit to keep you alive until the good guys come to rescue you. Well, now you're starting life over in a new place. These are some of the things you might want to bring along. | ||||||||
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So, you've made a SurvivalKit to keep you alive until the good guys come to rescue you. Well, now you're starting life over in a new place. These are some of the things you might want to bring along: | |||||||
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How To Make An Electonic Survival KitSo, you've made a SurvivalKit to keep you alive until the good guys come to rescue you. Well, now you're starting life over in a new place. These are some of the things you might want to bring along.References | |||||||
How To Carry It | ||||||||
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| First, I highly recommend that you combine your files into a single Zip file. That's because it's much easier to manage one file than 100. | ||||||||
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Second, and this is critically important, use an encryption program to put as password on the zip file! You're going to be putting a lot of sensitive information in there, so don't leave it out for any twit to find if you misplace your copy. I highly, highly recommend GNU Privacy Guard, or GPG. A FreeSoftware? package of it for Windows is available from http://www.gpg4win.org/ . Don't forget to put a copy of the installer on your backup media so that you'll be able to unlock your data when you need it! | |||||||
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Second, and this is critically important, use an encryption program to put as password on the zip file! You're going to be putting a lot of sensitive information in there, so don't leave it out for any twit to find if you misplace your copy. I highly, highly recommend GNU Privacy Guard, or GPG. A FreeSoftware? package of it for Windows is available from http://www.gpg4win.org. Under no circumstances should you trust the lame "encryption" (bah!) that comes with some storage media like USB keychain drives, or like is built into WinZip?. I mean it! Use a stand-alone encryption program. Don't forget to put a copy of the installer on your backup media so that you'll be able to unlock your data when you need it! | |||||||
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Third - and this is very important! - create the zip file on your computer's hard drive, then encrypt it, and finally move the encrypted file onto your backup media. You should never copy the unencrypted data onto that media! Even if you delete it afterward, it may be possible to recover the information. | |||||||
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Third - and this is very important - create the zip file on your computer's hard drive, then encrypt it, and finally move the encrypted file onto your backup media. You should never copy the unencrypted data onto that media! Even if you delete it afterward, it may be possible to recover the information. | |||||||
By the same token, don't decrypt the zipfile onto your backup media. Copy it onto the hard drive of the computer you're using to access it, then decrypt it and unzip it from there. Of course, if you're using a very public computer such as a rental at an Internet cafe, then that may actually be the worse option. Trust your own judgment, and let rampant paranoia be your guide.
Physically | ||||||||
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A floppy ain't gonna cut it. Your encrypted zipfile will probably be much larger than will fit on a floppy disk, unless your life is so simple that this is just an academic exercize. Your two main options are: | |||||||
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A floppy ain't gonna cut it. Your encrypted zipfile will probably be much larger than will fit on a floppy disk, unless your life is so simple that this is just an academic exercize. Your four main options, in the order I'd recommend them, are: | |||||||
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Store small amounts of information in a text file using an editor like Notepad (on Windows). Do not store it in a Word document! Believe it or not, many computers don't have an office suite installed on them, and you'd be seriously limiting your access options at a time when you can least afford it.
When scanning documents, set the resolution to at least 125DPI (200 is preferable); greyscale (instead of color) is fine and will use less space). Use at least 300 for photos. Don't just blindly turn your scanner to its highest setting, though, or you'll never get all of your documents to fit onto your media.
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SummaryThat list is pretty long and odds are you'll never need it. However, if you do, won't you wish you'd taken the time to get all this information together? Once you've managed to gather it, maintenance should be a snap - just make a new zip archive, encrypt it, and replace your old copy with the new one. Just remember the basics:
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| -- KirkStrauser - 09 Feb 2006 | ||||||||
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How To Carry ItElectronicallyOur primary goal is to make our data as easy to access as possible. This is critically important when you don't know what kind of machine you may have to use to access your data. You might have a beautiful Mac or Unix workstation at home, but if you were at home and could use your computer, then the rest of this would be pointless. Regardless of what you normally use, expect to be using a Windows box to First, I highly recommend that you combine your files into a single Zip file. That's because it's much easier to manage one file than 100. Second, and this is critically important, use an encryption program to put as password on the zip file! You're going to be putting a lot of sensitive information in there, so don't leave it out for any twit to find if you misplace your copy. I highly, highly recommend GNU Privacy Guard, or GPG. A FreeSoftware? package of it for Windows is available from http://www.gpg4win.org/ . Don't forget to put a copy of the installer on your backup media so that you'll be able to unlock your data when you need it! Third - and this is very important! - create the zip file on your computer's hard drive, then encrypt it, and finally move the encrypted file onto your backup media. You should never copy the unencrypted data onto that media! Even if you delete it afterward, it may be possible to recover the information. By the same token, don't decrypt the zipfile onto your backup media. Copy it onto the hard drive of the computer you're using to access it, then decrypt it and unzip it from there. Of course, if you're using a very public computer such as a rental at an Internet cafe, then that may actually be the worse option. Trust your own judgment, and let rampant paranoia be your guide.PhysicallyA floppy ain't gonna cut it. Your encrypted zipfile will probably be much larger than will fit on a floppy disk, unless your life is so simple that this is just an academic exercize. Your two main options are:
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