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![]() wrote in message news ![]() RST Engineering wrote: I've googled two sites, one on infininet from ~cuban8 and another one on an ohio net ~cuban8 and both of them seem dead. infinet gives me a "server not found" and the ohio site gives me a "you don't have persimmon to log on". It's just a jump to the left, and then a step to the right... http://www.archive.org/web/web.php Sorry, I find nothing there. Could you be a little more specific? They are for my own personal use; I'm taking the torch from Sacramento to New York tonight and wanted to play a little fun and games with the crew. Jim |
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RST Engineering wrote:
wrote in message news ![]() RST Engineering wrote: I've googled two sites, one on infininet from ~cuban8 and another one on an ohio net ~cuban8 and both of them seem dead. It's just a jump to the left, and then a step to the right... http://www.archive.org/web/web.php Sorry, I find nothing there. From the left side of that page: --- About the Wayback Machine Browse through 85 billion web pages archived from 1996 to a few months ago. To start surfing the Wayback, type in the web address of a site or page where you would like to start, and press enter. Then select from the archived dates available. The resulting pages point to other archived pages at as close a date as possible. --- Could you be a little more specific? 0. Find outdated broken link by the usual means (Google, etc.), such as http://some-old-domain.example.com/stuff.html . Copy this link. b. Go to http://www.archive.org/web/web.php . Find the text box that is pre-filled with "http://". Clean out that text and paste in the link you found in step 0. II. Click on the "Take Me Back" button immediately to the right of the text box you used in step b. 11. You should see a list of dates when the site in question ( http://some-old-domain.example.com/stuff.html ) was copied to the archive.org servers. Click on one of the dates. 04. You should see the web page as it was on the date you selected. archive.org almost always gets the HTML. Images and other file types are spottier but usually work. 0x5. archive.org rewrites the links, so if you click on a link in the initial archived web page, you will get the archived version of the new page as well. Note that some pages use white or light text and depend on having dark background images that sometimes don't load; if there are vast areas of nothing where it looks like there should be text, try selecting the suspected text to make it visible. Also note that the archive.org servers can be very busy, especially during US "prime time". Sometimes you'll get just the archived HTML with no or a few images, but if you come back later, most of the images will load. Or sometimes when you click on a date it will say "Not found", but if you try again later, it works. Matt Roberds |
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