++++ 1/14/2022 ++++ I have not written another piece for the smolWeb yet in 2022 mainly because I have been doing end-of-the-year work on my journal. Believe it or not, most of my thoughts and notes do not end up online. The whole process has been developed over years, and certainly not with anything resembling deliberate, straight-lined progress. I have quite a few notebooks filled up with my scribblings. From those, I learned how useful it is to label the pages and work on an end of book "index," which really is a table of contents placed at the back rather than the front. The thing is that on reflection I found that I really did prefer typing. It is quicker, it has tools like spell checking, and once the writing starts to pile up, it is much tidier, particularly as I am from the now dying breed of people who formed habits with information involving folders. Problem: I then grow terrified of the data getting corrupted. Back ups are, of course, the solution, but now let's talk about what kind of back up. USB sticks would be the exact place I have lost data before, so that in my mind is only a tool, not the solution. I could load all of my files onto google's cloud, but I believe most readers of this understand (and are part of creating) the vibes that make that not my favorite plan A, and certainly not what I want to make my only back up. So this year I printed my journal files on paper. I made two copies, one for a shelf at home, one to be buried at work. After I printed them, I spent my weekend creative time writing that table of contents, which I still will place at the back, for tradition's sake. Doing this is a great way to look back at the year, so I hope to make this what I do with journals for the foreseeable future, though I may more the review time to December, using my winter break, and then I would be back at creation by January. When I told my wife that each copy used up 75 sheets of paper she said "maybe you should have printed on both sides," to which I replied I had in fact done so. Now, each of my smolWeb pieces are also copied to the journal, as are many of the emails I sent. This provides a record of how my thinking develops, which is often as much, if not more, interest to my future self as what I think. However, there are a great many discoveries, mysteries, and puzzles that I noted and then just forgot I knew, and rediscovering those, and then indexing them so they can be relocated at a glance, is a true pleasure. The borderline between the Enlightenment and Romanticism is one of the best examples; I learned a lot and that exposes errors in how even the educated look at them, and I am drawn to want to understand more if I can ever get more time, and though I can't right now muster the time or energy for an explanation of what draws me back to it, that's the thing about a journal: it's just for me. There is so much I don't have to explain to my future self. Instead, I just have to have decent reminders. It's a writing process with much less friction. But to get the most meaning from it, periodic reviews are called for. While I am reviewing, I might as well do my back ups. Throw in some deep paranoia about the future of networks and you have the system I am describing. -- This work is hereby in the public domain. Do what you want with it.