I Bought a Book About the Internet From 1994 and None of the Links Worked (vice.com) 180
An anonymous reader shares a report (condensed for space and clarity): For crate-diggers of all stripes, the internet is awesome for one reason: The crate never ends. There's always something new to find online, because people keep creating new things to throw into that crate. But that crate has a hole at the bottom. Stuff is falling out just as quickly, and pieces of history that would stick around in meatspace disappear in an instant online. So as a result, there aren't a lot of websites from 1995 that made it through to the present day. Gopher sites? Odds are low. Text files? Perhaps. The endless pace of linkrot has left books about the internet in a curious limbo -- they're dead trees about the dead-tree killer, after all. [...] Recently, I bought a book -- a reference book, the kind that you can still pick up at Barnes and Noble today. The book, titled Free $tuff From the Internet (Coriolis Group Books, 1994), promises to help you find free content online. And, crucially, it focuses less on the web, which was still quite young, than on many of the alternative protocols of the era. This book links to FTP sites, telnet servers, and Gopher destinations, and I've tried many of them in an effort to figure out whether something, anything in this book works in the present day. These FTP servers were often based at universities which have a vested interest in keeping information online for a long-term period -- think the University of North Carolina, or Kansas State University. But despite this, I could not get most of these servers to load -- they were long ago murdered by the World Wide Web.
Internet time machine (Score:5, Informative)
Try the Internet time machine with those links, it might work and that's its purpose.
https://archive.org/web/ [archive.org]
Re:Internet time machine (Score:5)
Even my crappy 1st attempt at a website is there... https://web.archive.org/web/19... [archive.org]
Re:Mrs. Mash's AGENDA! (Score:4, Informative)
My post was buried [slashdot.org] in an earlier article. Editors on Slashdot rearrange what posts show up for different users.
You seem to be new here. Are you aware that when you post, your reply seems to be the first right underneath the post you replied to but, if you reload the page, your reply will move all the way to the last reply?
Re:Mrs. Mash's AGENDA! (Score:5, Informative)
/. editors quite obviously don't even spend much time editing, they certainly don't move posts around. Witness all the crude AC posts which appear near the top if browsing at threshold -1.
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Witness all the crude AC posts which appear near the top if browsing at threshold -1.
And, unfortunately, the Slashdot option which purportedly allows you to change the lower threshold for which you see posts has been broken for several years - so, if you didn't change that setting long ago, you cannot avoid all those crap posts now.
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Is this a "feature" of the latest interface? Yet another reason why Classic > *
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How is your post buried? It's right there, where it should be. It was the first reply to this comment [slashdot.org]. Where else should it be?
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I didn't know it would work with ftp links.
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Hey, your X-Files link is broken.
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Re:Internet time machine (Score:4, Informative)
there's no way you thought "some asswipe is making a bunch of money selling this to suckers who don't know what a search engine is."
the reason is search engines didn't really exist yet. the year 1995 is when the first engines launched, and they were not very complete. My understanding is Yahoo! search launched in March 1995.
basically everyone at the time was basically designing the internet still. they were just learning the internet, and search engines were not yet the "go to" that everyone knew. of course books were wrote, because things like search engines were not common place.
a lot of the internet was laid out like the story tells. lots of thinks on telnet, gopher, ftp, and the like, and not web pages like HTTP. there were tons of HTTP, fan pages of celebrity pics were popular.. tons of fan site/individual set up sites were what was hot. many popular sites that would later grow into large mega sites, started off as fan sites, made by regular people. some were sites started by large corporations.
search engines back then sucked so bad you could not even find stuff. when google launched in 2000 it was better, people switched to it pretty fast, seemingly because it provided better results.
many search engines did exist. they were popular to use in 2000. sites like lycos, ultavista, AOL, yahoo, etc... as I stated results sometimes sucked though.
anyway if you were thinking that, that's weird. lol.
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YOU MISTYPED http, IT SHOULD NOT BE HTTP, BUT 'http'.
SAME FOR aol, YOU MISTYPED THAT, TOO. TRY 'aol' NEXT TIME INSTEAD OF 'AOL'
HOPE THAT HELPED.
anyway if you were thinking that, that's weird. lol.
YES, YOU ARE WEIRD, LOL!
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the reason is search engines didn't really exist yet. the year 1995 is when the first engines launched, and they were not very complete.
This is wrong. Internet search engines existed. Archie and Veronica, anyone?
Web search engines is a different story.
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I think I had that book and gave it away to someone just getting connected to the net. It (or whatever similar book it was) seemed to be a good starting point.
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ad-infested piles of dogshit
I like that phrase! I’m going to borrow that.
Washington (Score:5, Interesting)
>These FTP servers were often based at universities which have a vested interest in keeping information online for a long-term period -- think the University of North Carolina, or Kansas State University.
No love for wuarchive.wustl.edu?
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>These FTP servers were often based at universities which have a vested interest in keeping information online for a long-term period -- think the University of North Carolina, or Kansas State University.
No love for wuarchive.wustl.edu?
+1, Nostaliga
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I remember, ages ago, you could NFS mount wuarchive. Of course, do it soft, unless you loved reboots... but that ability was nice.
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Oh definitely! The amount of Amiga stuff I downloaded from there... I also remember getting a good bit from rutgers.edu. Pirated Amiga discs and all. Don't guess anyone knew better in school administrations at the time of what was what. lol Just remember to set type to binary beforehand, or by the time you got your file downloaded (at 56k max), written to DS/DD discs, home to the Amiga, extracted via Disksmasher back to the actual disc images, you realize the hard way you downloaded in the default TEXT m
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Just like today with all those "hidden" caches of movies etc on corporate networks you'd probably find they had a list to exclude all that stuff from backups to save space but otherwise ignored it.
More recently obliterated (Score:5, Interesting)
I could not get most of these servers to load -- they were long ago murdered by the World Wide Web.
Try back 10 years ago in 2005, and you would likely find a LOT more of the 1994 stuff still working then.
I noticed in the more recent 5 or 6 years, a TON of old stuff finally vanished for once and for all.
This is the aging of the network though --- things go offline, and if the information didn't make it to Archive.org; I guess it's probably gone forever.
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Its not aging, commercialism has pushed everything else out. Its a purposeful destroying of the past so only the present can be focused on (i.e. selling you shit)
I am inquiring where the best location for tin foil sales would be? Or, if you know how to make it at home, I would be happier with free range foil. Can you help a pal out?
captch: slowdown
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Never attribute to malice what can adequately be described by rational self-interest.
Nobody wants those sites gone. They just worked on their own site so they could make money and everyone left.
Re:More recently obliterated (Score:5, Insightful)
Its not aging, commercialism has pushed everything else out.
Sorry, but wrong. The creation of a commercial site somewhere on the web does not "push out" another site or server. It's not a zero sum game; one old site has to die when a new site is created. I've had a website online for most of that 23 years. I've never once gotten a notice from anyone that the space we needed by Amazon or any other commercial internet data provider. True, I no longer run a gopher or WAIS server, but that's because as the operating systems updated those servers were no longer part of the distributions.
What this nit is complaining about is that a 23 year old book on technology talks about technology that has been obsolete for a long time already. Does he expect to buy a book on analog TV transmission technology and expect to find a plethora of analog TV stations he can access?
I have a book on early radio technology that I could sell him -- but he'd going to be very disappointed when he cannot find all the spark gap transmitters it talks about.
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Satellites are still out there.... All Encrypted and inaccessible these days, because
big corps. worked out they can make people pay serious $$$ for limited access.
Re:More recently obliterated (Score:4, Interesting)
I haven't had to look anything up in a phone book in probably 20 years, but I wonder if I found one from '97 how many of the numbers would still be valid.
Re: More recently obliterated (Score:2)
Re:More recently obliterated (Score:5, Informative)
Not commercialism, bandwidth. Home internet connections got much faster. People running the FTP servers found their traffic rising fast, exponentially. They either had to pay for a lot more bandwidth or shut up shop.
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If that system was up and running in the early 90's there's an excellent chance it was set up by someone on the computer science faculty who was probably in (statistically) his 30s or 40s at the time. 25 years later is that person still at
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In the last 5 or 6 years there has been a rising awareness of network security and a lot of these old services where probably significant liabilities that where little used and already had been largely replaced with web based versions.
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What? Who modded this up? The core discussion here is about content, not services. There's no reason an FTP site or a HTTP server can't keep serving the same content without security risks, especially given that the timescale we are talking about pre-dates poorly written PHP and similar garbage.
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If an FTP server only serves a couple of legitimate users per year, its generally not worth the effort to keep up to date.
It doesn't have to be poorly written PHP to be garbage. Poorly written C, which would have been common back then, can be far more dangerous.
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An FTP site is incredibly trivial to transfer to something running current software - "poorly written C" doesn't come into it. Username, password, get files - finished.
Re: More recently obliterated (Score:2)
He was talking about PHP, so the equivalent back then would have been custom programmed services for telnet, gopher or cgi for Web sites likely written in C.
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Yep, sounds about right. I lost interest in my website (a very obscure topic, but nonetheless some Wikipedia pages still quote it) in 2005 but paid for the web space for a few more years. Since 2009 the domain name is permanently for sale. The info is still on archive.org but I doubt anyone would bother - Wikipedia is much more informative nowadays than it used to be back then. The need for obscure websites on obscure topics is gone.
Non-notable? Obliterated (Score:2)
Wikipedia is much more informative nowadays than it used to be back then. The need for obscure websites on obscure topics is gone.
Until a Wikipedia editor proposes deletion of the articles about said topics for lack of "notability", or coverage in sources that meet Wikipedia's vague definition of reliability.
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Alot of this is due to the XP EOL.
Just like the IT recession of 2000 started after Y2K was patched these same systems remain unaltered and strict budgets until XP and Server 2003 had to go. When that happened the budget was increased temporarily and everything else might as well be upgraded at the same time and out the legacy Unix Gopher and FTP sites went as well.
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Re:More recently obliterated (Score:4)
If you are running public facing telnet, ftp, or even SSH even on your network switches you are doing security wrong IMO. SSH access to network switches should be on a private management network. If you need remote access, you should set up VPN access to that management network (with appropriate security). You should have a single secure entry point.
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There's so many fucking homegrown web things that don't even support REGET or similar instead of supporting something built on ssh or anything else that works effectively.
Hence people using Dropbox even at the fumbling start when it was a security joke even worse than plain FTP (it got better later). People wouldn't have put up w
It doesn't work that way. (Score:5, Insightful)
You can't just leave FTP servers and the like out there for the sake of nostalgia. All these resources require constant maintenance in order to keep them on-line, secure from vandals, etc. Perhaps most critically, it requires constant maintenance to keep them secure from delivering malicious content to people like the article writer.
There is also a difference between keeping content online in perpetuity, and keeping it online in the exact same way. Content worth saving (and pretty much everything else) is still available via the Wayback Machine, search engines, etc. That's why we don't need books and why we don't have to maintain decrepit technologies.
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You can't just leave FTP servers and the like out there for the sake of nostalgia. All these resources require constant maintenance in order to keep them on-line, secure from vandals, etc. Perhaps most critically, it requires constant maintenance to keep them secure from delivering malicious content to people like the article writer.
There is also a difference between keeping content online in perpetuity, and keeping it online in the exact same way. Content worth saving (and pretty much everything else) is still available via the Wayback Machine, search engines, etc. That's why we don't need books and why we don't have to maintain decrepit technologies.
Precisely. A book can sit on a shelf, pretty much until it disintegrates or gets eaten by bugs.
A book does not need maintenance, hosting fees, and domain fees. And it doesn't need to be defended from suddenly containing porn or committing mail fraud.
Like ftp.cdrom.com ? (Score:2)
Now I google up files and get a hundred sites; all suspicious and the files download as
ftp.cdrom.com was one ftp server that should not have been killed.
Re:Like ftp.cdrom.com ? (Score:5, Funny)
I've downloaded some of those old CDs from sites like that.
They're full to the brim with viruses, and, strangely, occasionally porn. Like, who puts porn PCX files in shareware games?
Fun sidestory: My wife woke me up one night at like 4 AM, "I found your PORN STASH", I get up, look at the her with her "I caught you" judging stare, and I look at the screen. Those PCX files from shareware. I point at the datestamp, "1994", and I go back to sleep.
Re:Like ftp.cdrom.com ? (Score:5, Informative)
So she found your 1994 porn stash?
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cdrom.com on archive.org (Score:2)
ftp.cdrom.com was one ftp server that should not have been killed.
It has a direct successor in the Walnut Creek CD-ROM archive [archive.org].
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Most distros including FreeBSD which ran cdrom.com have torrent files now where you can download them again fast by just keeping copies of the small torrent files
The Internet Yellow Pages... (Score:2)
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There were plenty of search engines in "the mid-90's", it's just that you were too fucking ignorant to know about them, and didn't understand fuck-all about the internet.
I ran a dial-up BBS during the 1994-95 school year. I had a dial-up Unix account and used Lynx in 1995. I didn't use a graphical web browser until I got my internship at Fujitsu in 1997, testing web pages to launch a client executable on Windows 3.11. And 20 years ago was when I first created my first web page. I supposed search engines were around then.
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Let me guess, you used Lycos in 1989 to design your 1500 calorie per day diet and hardcore 30-ton rowing weight routine, too?
Never used Lycos. The only search engines I ever used was Yahoo, Google and Bing (IE default at work).
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Bing? Really? Dude, are you ok?
Pointless exercise, is pointless. (Score:5, Funny)
I'm surprised you even found your way back online to report the fact that your internet reference books from a quarter century ago had dead links.
Get with the times doesn't even begin to describe the problem of failing to understand that not everything is timeless in this world.
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Good luck finding a CD drive on your current laptop.
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Good luck finding a CD drive on your current laptop.
As long as they haven't cost-reduced away the two adjacent USB2 (or later) ports, I can plug one in. Out of my four antique netbooks, only one of them is missing this feature.
Not Surprising (Score:3)
I'll agree that Universities have a vested interest in the preservation of knowledge, and so should do better. On the other hand, there are plenty of other changes to this or that university that have happened out in meatspace in the prior 25 years or so. Most of the buildings of my alma mater are still where they used to be, but their function (e.g., the departments that live in them) are not all the same. And certainly a lot of those physical spaces have received renovations over the years, resulting in walls that have been added, moved, or eliminated; outlets and network ports that aren't the same.
I'd wager a bunch of the content of that book is still out there, somewhere. And a lot of it is probably still at whatever custodian institution used to have it. Good luck finding it, though.
Re:Not Surprising (Score:4)
I'll agree that Universities have a vested interest in the preservation of knowledge, and so should do better.
That does not mean that they should try to maintain FTP or Gopher servers to access information, just that the information should still be online. The fact that a 23 year old book lists "broken links" is, well, yawn, and the fact that someone complains about it is a hoot.
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Good design leaves out as much as possible (Score:3)
This is a consequence of one of the best design decisions Tim Berners-Lee and his colleagues made. For decades some of the brightest people in the world had been struggling to perfect a distributed hyperinformation system suitable for general everyday use - but no one had succeeded. Then along came the CERN crew, and pulled it off almost immediately. Their secret? Leaving stuff out!
As a result, the Web has no standard mechanisms for cleaning up. We get broken links. We get cobweb sites that haven't changed for years, and - much worse IMHO - we get valuable pages that vanish because the funding dried up, the maintainer moved to a new post, or for a thousand other reasons.
Early versions of Netscape Communicator had two options for emailing a Web page: send just the URL, or send the whole page. After a while the second option was discontinued - presumably on legal grounds, as it was a tragedy on practical grounds. There are still add-ons that include the whole page, but presumably that's sufficiently arms-length that no one with any serious money is exposed to lawsuits. Or you could write your own. If you really need to refer back to material years or decades later, you just have to keep a copy of your own.
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I use Scrapbook+ on Firefox to capture web pages, which it does quite well — it does a good job of capturing the rendered content, anyway. You often have to manually scroll down the page to get all the assets to load.
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It's quite unfortunate that Scrapbook add-on and the clones will not work on Firefox 57.
Yes, I will have to try Pale Moon again. I've installed it, I just need to copy over my extensions.
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If you're using HTTP to manage a nuclear power plant, perhaps finding shut-off valve instructions is not your biggest problem.
Well DUH! (Score:2)
We are talking about a 23 year old book. This was back when there were only 4 states of matter, typical modem connection speed was 14.4kbaud, 28.8k is you were lucky.
Would you expect a 23 year old address directory be accurate today? Or a 23 year old telephone book?
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Oh, you mean like today's Comcast on Sundays.
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Something (Score:3)
Glad to know my all time favorite web site is still around and kickin it all these years later!
http://www.something.com/ [something.com]
Imagine it's 2035 (Score:1)
...and you are trying to fix a problem traced to a specific line of source code:
You could be thinking, "stackoverflow? That site died 10 years ago. I'm SOL!"
I actually have a WROX book that says to see a stackoverflow link for details.
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Stack Overflow on archive.org (Score:2)
Stack Exchange makes data dumps [archive.org] of Stack Overflow and its other Q&A sites available through the Internet Archive.
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To be fair, with all the screwy frameworks and API's needed to get PHB-approved eye-candy apps these days, it's hard to know why certain things really work (or don't work). Not all tweaks are logical: Han Solo still bangs the Millennium Falcon in a spot only known by him to get it work. "HanSolo.com says bang panel 7 if the foobulator stops working during high humidity."
A Similar Thing Happened To Me (Score:5, Insightful)
A similar thing happened to me. I found a telephone book from 1990 and none of the phone numbers were accurate either.
Also, I rediscovered a stash of business cards I received from colleagues and business associates back in the 80s and not only were the phone numbers wrong, so were most of the mailing addresses (and NONE of the fax numbers worked!)
Why is this news? Contact information changes. Is it because "it's on a computer" that it is suddenly noteworthy?
(That said, I really miss the days of logging in anonymously to FTP sites to see if there was new stuff to download. There was always an aura of mystery and surprise that is missing from modern archives which very dutifully have change logs telling you what's been added and removed. And no nasty SysOp telling you that you've exceeded your download quota either.).
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My parents lived in the same house since the 1970's, and I imagine many others have also. I would expect roughly 20% would still be valid, at least in terms of a relative or descendant answering.
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I've had the same landline number since I moved out of my mom's basement in 1989. My address has changed, but my phone hasn't.
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I'm still in my mom's basement and the pizza number still works. Haven't had to leave.
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That seems exceptionally stable. Since '89 I've lived in 4 different states, and experienced at least two area code split-offs. I may be pretty flighty, but I'd say the average in 27 years is at least one change for most people.
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I was in Des Plaines, IL for the 847 split-off.
Cap (Score:2)
And no nasty SysOp telling you that you've exceeded your download quota either.
Download quotas are still around. File-sending services impose quotas on non-paying users, and ISPs impose them even on paying users.
Headline contradicts summary (Score:2)
Headline says: I Bought a Book About the Internet From 1994 and ***None*** of the Links Worked [enphasis mine]
Summary says: But despite this, I could not get ***most*** of these servers to load [enphasis mine]
Way to go, slashdot editor!
I am certain that a Link to www.yahoo.com is in the book, and Still works. Unless you are trying to use the Mosaic Browser that was in the 5.1/4" 1,2Mbyte Disk that came with the book.
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> Unless you are trying to use the Mosaic Browser that was in the 5.1/4" 1,2Mbyte Disk that came with the book.
Hey, I paid good money for that browser.
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Talk about crap company. Are they even supporting that version 25 years later and can the browser run on todays operating systems? I think not. You got ripped off.
Are the books still in print? (Score:3)
Wait - that's not how it is supposed to work! (Score:2)
>>But that crate has a hole at the bottom. Stuff is falling out just as quickly, and pieces of history that would stick around in meatspace disappear in an instant online.
I call shenanigans! I have been told for years anything I put on the web is there for ever. Is this suddenly not the case?! Ugh.. Wait.. I can work in this confines. If only my tasteful junk pictures are free to loaf around for an eternity then I just need to paper clip them to any work, link, or site so THEY stay around as long
It's not just the internet (Score:1)
I found an old 1985 guide book for massage parlors in New York. I went to an address and asked a costumed woman dressed as a princess for a Vietnamese sandwich and a happy ending, Turned out the place is now a Disney Store. Whoops. Awkward!
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So did you get a happy ending?
Digital brain (Score:2)
Things that are not relevant anymore are gonna be scrapped, things that might have some use will be preserved... that is, while the organizations behind preservation efforts still live.
On a brighter tone, I was plenty pleased to see most of the games I played as a kid and teen back in the 80s-90s were mostly preserved with DosBox and other emulators efforts.
I think I also have a bunch of Flash stuff stored somewhere just in case. Most of the animations got converted to video and are still on YouTube, but I'
whodathunk? (Score:2)
Not just web/ftp/gopher links (Score:2)
But also game servers, for example old versions of Phantasy Star Online [sylverant.net] which have gone dark.
Someone should create a series of DNS servers that each captures a moment in time and seamlessly directs queries to modern equivalents or Wayback [archive.org] archives. Just pick the year you want, select the appropriate DNS server, and off you go, surfing or gaming as if it were 1997 again.
Um, what? (Score:2)
> I Bought a Book About the Internet From 1994 and None of the Links Worked
That sounds like a geek equivalent to a blonde joke. Like "I bought a coupon book at a garage sale but all the coupons had expired".
Refund (Score:2)
Did you check with the shop if you can get a refund on the book?
Oh Noes! (Score:2)
So confused... (Score:2)
Re: maybe time to dust off some of those protocols (Score:1)
Not going to happen. Ever. The Web happened because nobody in power was ready for it. Now they are. Your "new web" would be declared illegal and you would find yourself arrested before you even know it. It's over. We had our chance and we blew it.
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I've wondered about bringing back some legacy protocols, except over TLS, and with certificates for both sides:
1: NNTP -- separate the binary stuff from the non-binary, have a way to have a decent hierarchy structure, and that would beat the piss out of most forums out there.
2: IRC -- Simple and it worked. It would need a bigger namespace (so multiple people can have cool named channels, the ability to have permanent channel operators, and perhaps user based client certificates so certain channels can be
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The answer is going to be pretty similar on all counts.
In general, the browser implementations have some pretty established things you can do from javascript, and those rule the reality. So in general:
1. NNTP: The binary and text being mixed together was weird. Either way, a standardized API accessible over https could fill this role. In fact I wonder about the popular board implementations and they likely have APIs. Or else they get disabled because advertising is easier to inject into web pages.
2. C
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NNTP is pretty useless unless you're on the backbone these days - article drops way too frequently. Luckily, sites like Easynews provide a nice NNTP
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Due to XHTML2 not being backward compatible
Yeah, I'm sure that's it. You know that there was still a DOCTYPE tag in HTML, right?