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Photos are First Possessions To Be Saved In Fire And Last Items To Be Saved On Computer
Boston, MA -- January 16, 2006 -- The first items people attempt to save in a fire
are family photos and artwork; yet in the new age of digital photography, few people
have backed up family photos on their computers off-site where they won’t be destroyed
in a fire.
According to David Parker, CEO of www.DigitalCamera-HQ.com, a leading consumer digital
camera review site, “We are at a point where taking a picture on a digital camera
is child’s play, yet backing up that photo seems to take a person with an advanced
degree in computer science. Present networking solutions, home back-up external
hard drives and manual archiving on CDs are all complicated and time consuming.”
“Any manual backup process is a pain, and people just put it off until it’s too
late,” adds David Friend, CEO of Carbonite, a service that automatically backs up
photos on a remote server. “During the hurricanes and floods of the past year, thousands
of people lost all information on their computers – but the real tragedy was the
widespread loss of irreplaceable family photos. We made a commitment to making photo
backup completely automatic and very inexpensive so that our users would never have
this happen to them” he said. “Since Carbonite is so easy to use, completely automatic
and very inexpensive, we call it “Backup for Everyone.”
Carbonite is available at Staples and at www.Carbonite.com
About Carbonite
Carbonite is the only company that provides unlimited, automated photo backup over
the Internet for only a few dollars per month. Users simply “set and forget” PhotoBackup
and all of their photos will be continually, automatically backed up to Carbonite’s
secure server. In addition to PhotoBackup, Carbonite will soon be offering a service
that backs up all the information on your PC. More information can be found at www.carbonite.com
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