Digital Archaeology Show Reveals 'Lost' Web Sites
Stoobalou writes "The world's first ever 'archaeological dig' of the internet is set to begin this week in London's über-trendy Shoreditch. The exhibition, entitled Digital Archaeology, kicks off today to mark the 20th anniversary of the first stirrings of the world wide web. According to its organisers, valuable evidence from the interweb's early days is at risk of being lost forever. Digital Archaeology is an attempt to kick-start a wider attempt to archive the web in Britain's first 'digital archive'."
When they started the dig, the scientists were amazed to see the old now defunct web has buried in it the perfect tool to do the digging! Gophers!
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
of textfiles.com is more of a "digital archeologist" than this wanker, because he might have all that stuff you posted to BBSs back in the 70s/80s.
Plus, he's got an awesome speech on the history of electronic porn, going back to tickertape machines and ham radio(think about that).
http://laughingsquid.com/jason-scott-on-the-atomic-level-of-porn-at-arse-elektronika-2009/
Right, because no one's ever considered doing this before. Especially not in the UK!
When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
The web will be one big flash site using those neato web 2.0 buttons, and popups all over the place so you know where to get your hover car and penis pills. The future is bright indeed!
Digiboard, Inc. website (http://www.dgii.com) predated the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. When I started the website, only ~200 sites existed.