- Post apocalypse. No internet, no digital piracy. You managed to save one laptop that’s in your possession. What’s that one piece of data that you would’ve wished survived alongside you and your laptop, be it video, audio, executable or whatever? No wrong answers!
My answer: Stargate SG-1 (TV series), some 🔞 content and Linux.
- No post apocalypse, just the real world as it stands today. What’s one piece of data that you have been hunting for a long time but still haven’t been able to find or obtain it? No data shaming!
My answer: Erutan’s discography in .flac 😥


For post-apocalypse? 君の名は。. Even if it’s in Japanese, with no subtitles. Don’t threaten me with a good time. I used to watch it that way. I still would, but I found some really good subtitles. The film was released outside of Japan as “your name.” (the full-stop is part of the title both ways) but I prefer to call it by its original name in the original glyphs. Both of my computers and my phone (all Apple, so cloud sync) type it if I type the initials of the romanised version of the name (Kimi no Na wa.), period and all. Text replacement, any computer/phone can do it, but it’s nice to have the cloud sync.
White whale? Honestly I don’t have one anymore. I used to have a couple, but I found them. There was a movie I was trying to find for years and years, and a game as well, and I’d Google things and it would never come up. These days, you can just ask ChatGPT and it’ll tell you what it is. Now, if it’s something I know what it is but I haven’t obtained it yet? I’d have to say FLAC copies of every record, tape, or CD I’ve ever owned. That includes my siblings and parents as well, so I could throw it on my Plex server. My mother in particular had to get rid of 250+ records. Would be nice to have all that back, digitally. I think I have the important parts of the collection.