Absolutely! Cell phone are a great example. Most people love taking pics, but rarely give much thought about storing them for the future. Why? It's kind of difficult, from the angle of categorizing the subject matter. Most of us on this website, I'm guessing, enjoy this sort of activity. But I'm guessing most people would rather go to the dentist then sort through photos and decide the best place to put them, both folders and storage.
> But I'm guessing most people would rather go to the dentist then sort through photos and decide the best place to put them, both folders and storage.
Most people tend to love going through their old photos, thinking of the people and places depicted, and sorting them. For an extremely long time this was entirely the norm and it took place mostly using large cumbersome physical books where meta data was recorded by hand by writing on the back of the photo.
It's become much easier now that files are digital, only slightly offset by the fact that digital has enabled us to take many more photos than in the past. What I see more often are people who have no idea when the photos on their phones are actually stored at all (what's a file system?), let alone how to copy them off their phone and onto something more appropriate besides resorting to something like emailing photos to themselves which has all the problems of adding and successfully transferring large file attachments.
It's a chore because companies really don't want people to have access to their own files unless it's on the company's terms and using their cloud servers.