Laura,

This is what happened to your backups: the contents of the file on the Flash 
Disk were wiped out before you did a backup, and because you could only do 
backups while you're outside the file, you were not aware that the file was 
already blank or corrupted.

What should be done with the BrailleNote?: Hurl it to the street below from a 
10-story window.  Just kidding! You can send it to the Philippines if you want 
because there's a kid I'm helping here who needs a notetaker.  OK, what's the 
right way of making backups?

1) Someone advised using the Copy File option in the File Manager instead of 
the Backup Option in the Utilities Menu.  I wouldn't recommend that for ALL 
files, maybe just some, but not all, especially the databases.  That's how I 
lost my copy of an 8.13 MB e-mail DB.
You would think that the file is being copied successfully.  You would even be 
asked about replacing an old DB copy.  But when you need to load it back into 
your unit, it's gone...  not just the contents, but the file itself.  The 
Backup Option hasn't done that to my knowledge.

2) I'm sorry I did not reply to your post earlier.  I should've corrected, or 
at least added something to, the advise to do multiple backups.  Notice that 
the reason why you've lost three months worth of work on that file is because 
you do not have old backups lying around.  The right thing to do is to retain 
complete, not corrupted, backups during certain times.  This would depend on 
how much storage space you have.
For example, you should not just have one backup folder on your cf card.  I 
have a backup folder for November, for October, for September, so on and so 
forth.  You could have weekly folders if you want.  They do not contain the 
same stuff because I move to a different storage those I won't be needing 
anymore in a different month, and files in the newer folders are longer (more 
updated) than those with the same file names in older folders.  Thus, if I lose 
a file saved in the November folder but was originally created in July, I don't 
lose data from July to November, but just for November.  The shock of losing 
data in this case is more tolerable (though still not completely forgivable).

3) Since you already have learned (though learned it not from this list, but 
the hard way - from experience) that relying on backups made on to cf cards 
using your BrailleNote will inevitably corrupt data, if and when you have your 
own computer running a respectable screen-reader, save or transfer to it copies 
of all important files (databases, lecture notes, planner or lists of 
appointments and phone numbers, etc., meaning, you don't need to include those 
that you can download from the internet again, or are just your "scratch" 
files, and the default BN files such as the DB definition files, Readme texts, 
and Dictionary files).
Remember, using Active sync as some have suggested can also give you data loss 
problems because it had been mentioned here before that large files (the 
minimum problem size is unknown) likewise get truncated during file transfer.  
Thus, as I have suggested many times to you off list, get a PCMCIA Type II 
adapter for ease of file transfer from BrailleNote to your laptop.  If you're 
family is getting a desktop, then get your own card reader if you cannot take 
home the one you use in school.  Neither the PCMCIA adapter nor the card reader 
would cost more than 30 dollars, so getting one or both shouldn't be a problem 
for you.
You can keep the Keyword files in their format when you save them in the 
computer, but I would suggest, if you're not feeling lazy, that you convert the 
lecture notes (or those you use on a daily basis) to another format as well 
that is readable on the computer (say, .txt or .rtf) and save both the Keyword 
and non-Keyword copies of the important files, just in case you follow my 
suggestion above of throwing your BrailleNote out the window, <laugh>.  BTW, I 
use two cf cards for this purpose.  One contains the backups accessed through 
the BrailleNote.  The other contains the files that are to be transferred to 
the computer, which in your case, I suggest that you check the size once on the 
laptop and if it does not correspond (say it's 0 or a smaller number than the 
original size), then you can be sure it's corrupted and must be replaced with 
the complete one.

4) Though no one would confirm this to be true, I still think you need to get 
48 MB on-board memory.  I have much longer files for my notes in graduate 
school, containing not just my notes in class for the five months of a 
semester, but also researches from the net and solutions and proofs from four 
different math books, that the files reach a size over 4 MB, with extensions 
such as .kwb, .kwt, .rtf and .doc, but I have never lost data in any of these 
large files.  You know for a fact that the only files I've lost or got 
corrupted are the databases, but if you can take my word for it, though I save 
copies of all important files in my laptop since I got it, I have had no need 
to load them back to my BN yet.
People can call my insistence on the link between data loss and the 16 MB 
memory pure speculation, but they could never explain why I haven't had 
problems with large files getting truncated or wiped out.  A few say their 
units have 48 MB memory and have lost data, but I think that's already due to 
mishandling of files (e.g., not giving the BrailleNote enough time to finish 
its "house-cleaning" tasks when saving, exiting, opening, copying and moving 
files, by turning off the unit or pressing RESET or pulling out the cf/storage 
card too soon), which would explain why only few of these 48 MB memory users 
report losing data.

Speaking of house-cleaning matters, the word "disbelief" is written NOT with 
the "letters" b e contracted as dots 2-3 (see your original subject line) 
because using that lower sign in the middle of a word is to contract the 
letters bb.  This is true for grade 2 Braille, not just Duxbury on the 
BrailleNote.  But as for DBT on the BN, I think I've told you this already, you 
cannot use one- and two-cell contractions before an ellipsis, and that you must 
spell them out; otherwise, they are mistranslated as the letters comprising the 
contraction (see your message below).

HTH,
Roselle

>----- QUOTED MESSAGE -----
>Sent by: Laura Wolk <"[EMAIL PROTECTED]"@smtp.enter.net

>Oh Kellie, I sure hope you don't have some sort of vendetta against me, 
>because you will not believe what has happened.  Obviously, because I can't my.

>After my data loss yesterday, I did what any good user would do, and backed up 
>my data, not once, but twice.  B...  everything, absolutely EVERYTHING, is 
>gone from three files.  Not just on my flash disk, but in both my backups as 
>well.  This time it's not just missing information, absolutely blank 
>documents.  I think I'm in shock actually because it's inconceivable for me to 
>realize that three months worth of work, energy, time...  is just gone, from 
>three subjects.  J...' poof! I, well, I guess I know what I'll be doing this 
>weekend, either begging, pleading, groveling, bribing friends to send me their 
>notes or going through the whole thing myself and doing it.  Laura




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