Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
What Happens To Your Laptop Etc When You Die!!!!
21 Answers
I know this is a silly question but what are you going to do about your laptops and PCs etc when you pop your clogs!!!
OK most of you will have "friend or family" who will clear/deal with it but what if you don't have anybody?
Any suggs guys?
OK most of you will have "friend or family" who will clear/deal with it but what if you don't have anybody?
Any suggs guys?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by alzheimer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I will be dealing with it like paperwork. Dumping anything upsetting or embarrassing if I can.
Yes you may need to provide a death cert for certain things if you don't have login details. My late DH operated a website for a local motorbike organisation including paying for it and being refunded the costs by the group. The other person who had the login details (I didn't) emigrated unexpectedly and couldn't be contacted by the group (long horrible story) so I had to get on the Fasthosts and "claim" the account on the basis of being the owner's widow. Fasthosts were wonderful. I had to send a letter in stating the facts and enclosing a death cert and they reset the logon for me so I could pass it over to the group.
Yes you may need to provide a death cert for certain things if you don't have login details. My late DH operated a website for a local motorbike organisation including paying for it and being refunded the costs by the group. The other person who had the login details (I didn't) emigrated unexpectedly and couldn't be contacted by the group (long horrible story) so I had to get on the Fasthosts and "claim" the account on the basis of being the owner's widow. Fasthosts were wonderful. I had to send a letter in stating the facts and enclosing a death cert and they reset the logon for me so I could pass it over to the group.
I do believe you can bequeath your email account to friends or family via Google's "Inactive Account Manager" I haven't tried it yet - but guess it wouldn't work on any stand-alone mailers - only web-based ones.
As you say - you should leave clear instructions - especially when you have thousands of photos that would be a shame to lose - not to mention lists of valuations of household items etc....oh well - nowt else for it but to pray for a long life...LOL
As you say - you should leave clear instructions - especially when you have thousands of photos that would be a shame to lose - not to mention lists of valuations of household items etc....oh well - nowt else for it but to pray for a long life...LOL
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
I only ever use cheap secondhand computers, for what I use them for personally spending big bucks on the latest technology would be overkill. Anything I need keeping safe like sentimental photographs, utility bills and email settings I burn to a CD that my better half can also access (they live in the filing cabinet next to the chequebooks). As for the machine itself, wipe it, stick it on ebay and put the proceeds towards a free bar at my wake. Might pay for half a mild if you're lucky. Does anyone still use Windows 3.1?
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
When my brother died I had no way to access his laptop so several people must have been mystified as to the sudden lack of email replies. Put passwords in a safe place where they can be found by whoever is administering the estate. I checked with a lawyer and there is no way that web servers etc., can be compelled to reveal passwords, even if you know the user name. A complete dead end.. ..literally.
-- answer removed --
I remember reading about this at the time
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-22 34997/R ise-cyb erwill- tie-onl ine-aff airs.ht ml
http://
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.