The New York Times on Going Paperless

The New York Times has a nice overview of the challenges and advantages of ditching paper. According to the NYT’s Hannah Fairfield,

Some homes may no longer have phone books, but many have scanners — and, increasingly, more than one. Flatbed scanners, which most people use for photographs, offer high resolution but are cumbersome for scanning large volumes of paper. New, cheap document-feed scanners that can digitize a stack of papers, receipts or business cards in seconds are becoming popular. Add multiple computers, digital cameras and maybe an electronic book reader, and suddenly paper seems to be on the endangered-species list.

After rising steadily in the 1980s and ’90s, worldwide paper consumption per capita has plateaued in recent years. In the richest countries, consumption fell 6 percent from 2000 to 2005, from 531 to 502 pounds a person. The data bolsters the view of experts like Mr. Kahle who say paper is becoming passé.

Fairfield includes a nice quote from the EFF’s Brad Templeton that he refuses to throw anything away, saying, “I have phone bills from 1983 and taxes from the 1990s. But I have everything scanned, so it takes up no physical space.”

Absolutely. I actually print ream after ream of material — in fact, I’ve joked with some co-workers that I see a printer’s monthly duty cycle as a challenge. But paper is best for short term handling and organizing of ideas. Once its time to store important documents, scan it and shred it.

The NYT cites the Fujitsu ScanSnap which is hands-down the best document scanners I have ever owned.  I have scanned tens of thousands of pages worth of documents on it over the past couple years. I still have a flatbed scanner for photographs, kids drawings and other epherma that I want very high quality scans of, but the Fujitsu ScanSnap is perfect for 95 percent of the paper that crosses my many desks.

Like Templeton, I scan pretty much anything that I might remotely want to access later. Why not? I can buy a 750gb hard drive for $175 off of Amazon.Com. Why not just scan everything. Personally, I can recount numerous times where being the only person who had a copy of a long forgotten memo or report was extremely helpful.

One tool the New York Times didn’t mention, but that I find essential, is DTSearch. Between e-mail, PDF scans of documents, text files, etc., I’ve easily got 400gb worth of archived data. Finding that report I kind of remember from 2002 becomes very difficult. But DTSearch will fully index all of that data and provides some very sophisticated ways to search, including fuzzy logic searching, synonym searching, etc. It ain’t cheap — the personal desktop version is $199 — but it is the best full text search product for Windows, period. It has saved the day for me on numerous occasions.

Microsoft Kills Marvel Universe MMO

Back in November, City of Heroes developer Cryptic sold all of its interests in City of Heroes/Villains to NCSoft. The speculation was that Cryptic wanted to devote all of its time and energy to the Marvel Universe MMO which it was developing for Microsoft. Except this month, Microsoft went ahead and announced that it was ending development on the Marvel Universe MMO. WTF?

The odd thing is that Microsoft flak Shane Kim strongly implied that the reason they killed the Marvel MMO was that they did not believe they could achieve World of Warcraft-like subscription levels with it. Maybe someone finally showed them City of Heroes/Villains subscription numbers, which are in the 140,000 area.

My wife and I played CoH for a couple months and the game was fairly good, but the interface was absolutely awful. A well-done superhero MMO, especially with the Marvel license, could certainly expand on COH’s numbers, so it is a bit odd to see Microsoft of all companies throw in the towel.