TY - JOUR AB - The increasing availability and popularity of ways to capture personal memories using technologies such as digital cameras is beginning to alter the way in which personal memory images are produced, retained and circulated. Unlike the analog technologies, it is now possible to create an immediately available presence on the Internet. When examined from the perspective of voice, this phenomenon expands the potential of creating personal history narratives that could be collated together to produce a nonā€institutional history of an era. This paper explores the ways in which the digital technologies can facilitate the production of such histories and what the technologies could do the sense of presence of an individual in the realm of the virtual. VL - 3 IS - 1 SN - 1477-996X DO - 10.1108/14779960580000257 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/14779960580000257 AU - Mitra Ananda PY - 2005 Y1 - 2005/01/01 TI - Digitial memory T2 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 3 EP - 13 Y2 - 2024/04/23 ER -