[The guide isn’t mine and I’m not affiliated with it, I’m just sharing a mind-blown moment for me.]

Over the years, I have gathered many notebooks that admittedly not all contain very important information and take up a lot of space (possibly a cubic meter or more). But being kind of a (data)hoarder, I dont want to just throw them away. It’s work that took years.

My solution: scanning them. My phone has a built-in camera scanner that does a suprisingly good job (it helps that the camera is kinda good too), so I have scanned thousands of pages so far. But the process is slow and takes a lot of manual labor (flipping pages, aligning pages, retaking bad photos, creating pds etc.). A typical notebook (~120pages) may take me 15minutes or more.

So I thought that maybe I could speed up the process (partially at least) by either buying a scanner or paying someone to scan them (I don’t have a proper scanner, yet). Removing the pages without damaging them is a challenge though. That’s where the guide in the link comes in: it turns out it’s very easy to remove the spiral spring from the notebooks! I was gonna pull the pages until I found that guide. I suppose it’s also very easy to remove the staples from staple-bound notebooks too. I might just have “won” many hours of my life with this idea.

The video in the guide that helped me:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfMUVpwLZGM

(For the record, my xiaomi 10 phone can scan items by creating ~20MP images which translates to typical-to-high resolutions if I scan A4 or A5 pages. Fortunately, many scanners can reach that quality. I just need them not to apply any weird effects or compression to the scanned document.)

3 points

I use a notebook that’s compatible with erasable pens. The “paper” is basically a plastic film, and you can write/erase/rewrite on them for many, many years. After I’m done with a particular page/note, I’ll scan it (with my phone) into my NAS’ storage.

I can’t imagine using paper and unbinding the notebook. LOL

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2 points

I scanned all my college notebooks many years ago. Have this little handheld scanner called an CapShare by HP and on a rainy day one weekend scanned them all in. Only takes up ~250MB

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1 point

Wow, in a single day? And only 250mb? Nice

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2 points

Maybe two days, Sat and Sunday. Then simple black and white images don’t take a lot of space. 2857 files. 252mB

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1 point
*

A cubic meter of notebooks? Holy shit. That’s about… 2145 A5 moleskines. Surely you are overestimating.

The math: 1/(0.21*0.148*0.015)

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1 point

I might oversetimate, I dont have all the boxes in front of me now to measure. I think I have around 4 boxes though, around 50x30x40cm each, plus some random heaps of books scatterred around…😬

If you can notice, this size of boxes is very inefficient. An A4 paper is around 30x21cm. If the boxes were slightly bigger, they could fit 4 stacks of A4-sized books. They way they are though only allows for ~2 heaps, leaving a lot of empty space (though they might arent strong enough to support a completely full box). It essentially increases the total used space ~1.5 times.

I even made my custom box once of “proper” size (to fit 4 stacks of A4 books).

Also, it’s not just a5 notebooks. About half of the notebooks are a4 and I have many books which I used to take notes from. I try to scan them too, the pages which have notes of mine at least.

I know, it’s a mess and while I’ve scanned possibly ¼-⅓ of the total mass, I still have a lot more and I create more as time passes.

I might either buy a scanner with autofeeding or find any place that can properly scan my stuff for cheap.

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datahoarder

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Who are we?

We are digital librarians. Among us are represented the various reasons to keep data – legal requirements, competitive requirements, uncertainty of permanence of cloud services, distaste for transmitting your data externally (e.g. government or corporate espionage), cultural and familial archivists, internet collapse preppers, and people who do it themselves so they’re sure it’s done right. Everyone has their reasons for curating the data they have decided to keep (either forever or For A Damn Long Time). Along the way we have sought out like-minded individuals to exchange strategies, war stories, and cautionary tales of failures.

We are one. We are legion. And we’re trying really hard not to forget.

– 5-4-3-2-1-bang from this thread

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