Baldur Bjarnason
“Adactio: Links—404PageFound – Active Vintage Websites, Old Webpages, and Web 1.0” adactio.com/links/18435
Well, this is rather lovely! A collection of websites from the early days of the web that are still online.
All the HTML pages still work today …and they work in your web browser which didn’t even exist when these websites were built.
“Adactio: Links—404PageFound – Active Vintage Websites, Old Webpages, and Web 1.0” adactio.com/links/18435
This magnificent piece by Maxwell Neely-Cohen—with some tasteful art-direction—is right up my alley!
This piece looks at a single question. If you, right now, had the goal of digitally storing something for 100 years, how should you even begin to think about making that happen? How should the bits in your stewardship be stored with such a target in mind? How do our methods and platforms look when considered under the harsh unknowns of a century? There are plenty of worthy related subjects and discourses that this piece does not touch at all. This is not a piece about the sheer volume of data we are creating each day, and how we might store all of it. Nor is it a piece about the extremely tough curatorial process of deciding what is and isn’t worth preserving and storing. It is about longevity, about the potential methods of preserving what we make for future generations, about how we make bits endure. If you had to store something for 100 years, how would you do it? That’s it.
What are your own scribbles, your own ordinary plenty, not worth much to you now but that someone in the future may treasure?
For many archivists, alarm bells are ringing. Across the world, they are scraping up defunct websites or at-risk data collections to save as much of our digital lives as possible. Others are working on ways to store that data in formats that will last hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of years.
Go spelunking down the archives to find some lovely graphic design artefacts.
Clicking through these cold war slides gives an uncomfortable mixture of nostalgic appreciation for the retro aesthetic combined with serious heebie-jeebies for the content.
The slides appear to be 1970s/1980s informational or training images from the United States Air Force, NORAD, Navy, and beyond.
Losing an eleven year bet.
Hyperlinks are the things with feathers.
Digital destruction courtesy of the Brooklyn Museum.
When is an explanation not an explanation?
The difference between being on the web and being archived.