INTERNET INSITE: Publish your life story online
Do you have an interesting Web site you'd like to see featured on Internet InSITE? Email Web Manager Justin Piehowski, jpiehowski@kstp.com. Watch INTERNET InSITE each Monday at 6:30 on 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS MORNING.
SITE: http://www.livingmemory.com
I knew it was going to happen eventually--A new social networking Web site now allows people to post content online and keep it there forever. That's right, not a $12.95 per year or a $3 per month...absolutely free, forever.
At least that's what the site LivingMemory.com claims it can do. The site helps you assemble a day-by-day online autobiography including timelines, photo logs and a family tree. The catch here is that you update it daily or weekly or monthly...as much as you'd like.
And it never goes away.
Server storage space has finally become cheap enough where this company feels it can store things indefinitely and promise users 'forever.'
The hope is that you will keep it throughout your life and you'll have a reasonable record of your life to look back on. CEO James Murray explains his motivation for starting the site in a letter to users:
Read 'The Living Memory Prophecy'
LivingMemory could really have a future, that is, if they can deliver on the promise of 'forever.'
Need more Internet InSITE? Check the archives: http://www.kstp.com/article/10000/
SITE: http://www.livingmemory.com
I knew it was going to happen eventually--A new social networking Web site now allows people to post content online and keep it there forever. That's right, not a $12.95 per year or a $3 per month...absolutely free, forever.
At least that's what the site LivingMemory.com claims it can do. The site helps you assemble a day-by-day online autobiography including timelines, photo logs and a family tree. The catch here is that you update it daily or weekly or monthly...as much as you'd like.
And it never goes away.
Server storage space has finally become cheap enough where this company feels it can store things indefinitely and promise users 'forever.'
The hope is that you will keep it throughout your life and you'll have a reasonable record of your life to look back on. CEO James Murray explains his motivation for starting the site in a letter to users:
Read 'The Living Memory Prophecy' LivingMemory could really have a future, that is, if they can deliver on the promise of 'forever.'
Need more Internet InSITE? Check the archives: http://www.kstp.com/article/10000/
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