uk-netmarketing Archive
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Subject: | RE: UKNM:Time Capsule |
From: | Leslie Bunder |
Date: | Mon, 2 Oct 2000 15:36:35 +0100 |
wasn't there something happening in the states a few years back called Web
History or something where some University was indexing pages in their
original form and storing them...
Leslie
------------------------------------------------------------
Leslie Bunder, Content Partner Manager
Entranet
Email: Leslie [dot] Bunderentranet [dot] co [dot] uk
Tel: 07799 710831
Web: www.entranet.co.uk
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-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Ireland [timdesignercity [dot] com (mailto:timdesignercity [dot] com)]
Sent: 28 September 2000 16:10
To: uk-netmarketingchinwag [dot] com
Subject: UKNM:Time Capsule
I've had this idea bouncing around my head for a few weeks now, and it just
won't go away.
Those of us who have been on the web for a while may have dim memories of
how such 'classic' sites as Amazon and Yahoo used to look and operate - but
of course there's no way for anyone to experience these sites in their
'vintage' form (though a few screengrabs may be scattered around somewhere).
The web changes constantly, leaving almost no record of what used to be -
and I for one would like to be able to look back on it in about 5 to 10
years time and refresh my memory of what is (I feel) a very telling period
in its history. I'd like to be able to move around inside it and experience
it as it used to be - from the biggest commercial sites to the tiniest and
crappiest personal home pages.
All very well and good on the surface you might say, but there are quite a
few things that make this a f#*%ing massive undertaking, not least of which
being the incredible number of websites involved. I'm not blind to the
enormous technical, administrative and copyright complications either - or
the (ahem) small matter of commercial viability.
But this is what lottery cash is for, isn't it?
;o)
<hennypenny>
So who will help me bake this bread?
</hennypenny>
Tim Ireland
www.designercity.com
www.another.com
www.buymybook.co.uk
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