Vid-20211031-wa0031mp4

Most of these files remain unplayed for years. We keep them because deleting them feels like deleting a piece of our own timeline. That specific 30-second clip might be a shaky recording of a friend laughing at a party, a child in a costume, or just the sound of wind through dead leaves.

We all have them. Buried deep within the "Media" subfolders of our smartphones, past the screenshots of recipes we’ll never cook and the blurry photos of receipts, lies a graveyard of alphanumeric strings.

A bridge. It reminds us that this wasn't just a video we took; it was a video we shared . It represents a connection made through a screen when we couldn't be in the same room. VID-20211031-WA0031mp4

At first glance, it’s digital noise. It’s a robotic label assigned by a messaging algorithm. But look closer at the timestamp: Halloween. A night of masks, autumn air, and, for many of us, the first real breath of normalcy after a year of isolation. The Anatomy of a Digital Memory

In the physical world, memories fade like old Polaroids. They yellow at the edges. In the digital world, they don't age—they just become harder to find. When we see a file like WA0031 , we are looking at a "digital artifact." Most of these files remain unplayed for years

The next time you’re cleaning out your storage, don’t be so quick to hit "Delete All." Click on that mysterious MP4. You might find that the most profound things are often hidden behind the most boring names.

The Ghosts in Our Folders: Finding Meaning in VID-20211031-WA0031.mp4 We all have them

Because filenames like this often represent personal memories or "lost" digital fragments, I’ve drafted a deep blog post that explores the