Paul, Your welcome. Just for the fun of it I tried it on the FOTD page. It seems the last cache was made on June 30, 2003. If I go into it from there it finds that FOTD there with its full graphic. Then I went to the Jan 17, 1999 cache and found some FOTD's there, again with their full graphic. I've looked at the source of this html and what they have done is to redirect the links within the pages to point deeper into their cache. That is, if you click on a link within the cached page, you stay in the Wayback archive. You have to wonder where they are getting all the space to store this. They claim to be located in the Presidio. Gerald, That page is recent, but I stopped looking for it in the last few months of 2003 when I found the Wayback. I used Dogpile to determine the new page showed up sometime in October which is reassuring. I had looked for it quite obsessively at one time and used terms like home page etc. It would be interesting to find a search engine that might tell you about the page it finds. When it appeared, who own's the domain, etc all in one click. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.576 / Virus Database: 365 - Release Date: 1/30/2004
Vortex Swirling wrote:
That page is recent, but I stopped looking for it in the last few months of 2003.... ....the new page showed up sometime in October....
Yes, once before there had been a copy of Paul Derbyshire's 'manguide' floating around on the Internet. But it disappeared a few years ago. Maybe this newest incarnation will stay around for awhile, and of course the web archive site. (And I thought I was attempting to do well with my archives.) ;-} Sincerely, P.N.L. ------------------------------------------------- http://home.att.net/~Paul.N.Lee/PNL_Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
"Vortex Swirling" wrote:
That page is recent, but I stopped looking for it in the last few months of 2003 when I found the Wayback. I used Dogpile to determine the new page showed up sometime in October which is reassuring.
So it was only lucky timing I found it again at the first try (I had removed it from my bookmark list after a few misses, assuming "real life" had caught up with the author, as often is the case with "hobby" internet pages). Lets hope it remains in existence for some time now... Regards, Gerald
participants (3)
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Gerald K. Dobiasovsky -
Paul N. Lee -
Vortex Swirling