files
This is a post about how I organise my computer files.
home folder
At the time of this writing, my home folder contains these folders. It hasn’t changed much in years. Sometimes I’d just rename a folder just for the kicks and incidentally also break my fragile shell scripts.
- aud
- a dusty corner, contains my audio projects and thus contains unfinished tracks, old Marabu compositions and instruments
- dev
- contains git repositories of my coding projects
- docs
- contains personal files, ebooks, PDFs, basically any document
- garage
- contains miscellanea; I also store zipped archives of old projects in here to keep
dev
andvis
tidy - intra
- contains my Intra and Log files
- moodboard
- contains visual inspiration from the internet for my moodboard wallpapers
- pictures
- contains my photography
- vis
- contains my art projects — animations, digital art, pixel art, unfinished icon sets and typefaces
naming
I haven’t been very consistent with naming in the past, but in recent years, I’ve grown to adopt the following:
- As much as possible, I try to use lowercase, single-word file and folder names. This is mostly to satisfy my minimalist tendencies.
- For artworks and other files that require chronological context, I use a
YYMMDD
* format for the file name. This matches the tags used in associated time-tracker entries. If I create more than one artwork in a day, I add an incremental counter to the name, like241102-1
. This is something I wish I followed since birth, as every now and then, I’d stumble upon a forgotten drawing with unhelpful metadata to determine when I made it and an even more unhelpful name.
backups
My trust in cloud storage services have dwindled significantly over the years. Nowadays, I don’t really use them to host personal files.
The laptop used to have an optical drive (remember those?) wherein now resides a secondary HDD I named Citadel. There I keep local backups of certain files from the main SSD.
Additionally, I also have a couple of external backup locations in the form of a microSD card and a USB drive encased in an old cassette.
maintenance
Regular maintenance is a must to maintain order. Having fewer files makes it a lot easier to organise so I’ve made it a weekly habit to set aside at least an hour, usually on Saturdays (hence why I decided to write about this today), to go through my computer, purge things, and organise what remains:
- Clear the downloads folder. It’ll always accumulate mishmash.
- Archive old or finished projects. Store them somewhere easily accessible if you want to refer to them now and then.
- Go through your recent screenshots and process them.
- Get rid of old ebooks, research papers, notes, and any other documents you’re sure you won’t be reading or referring to them again in the future.