A SCARY STORY by Editor, SLKUG, July 1987 (A lesson in the benefits of frequent 'saves') On Friday, June 19th, there was a storm in the afternoon, a pretty heavy rainfall with lots of thunder and lightning, or so they say. What I mean by that is I work in a large well- insulated office with no windows. Suddenly, the lights all went out for a few seconds and came back on. Now, when I say lights, this is an office which houses hundreds of people and the lights are fluorescent lights in the ceiling. They all went out, along with the desk lamps, and of course, the computers went down, too. Almost all of the fourteen computers affected are engineering graphic computers. Some specialize in electronics, some specialize in mechanical design. Nevertheless, all were in use and they all went down. The last time that the operators saved what they were working on was at least 30 minutes before and probably much longer on some who declined knowledge of when they had saved last. For the purpose of discussion, let's give them the benefit of the doubt. Say, they all had saved 60 minutes before, what we lost in those seconds of power-out was at least $50 per hour x 14 computers x 1 hour = $700 besides the damage to the engineering schedule for when the drawings were due to be completed. What would be the damage to your operation if the power went out and you lost everything since you last saved? How much work would you NOT be able to duplicate? Remember, we still have not talked about damage to equipment because of the sudden loss of power. That is a big unknown even yet three days after the failure as to whether the sudden shutdown shortened the life of computer parts. So, save soon and save often, it pays off in the long run to get into the habit.