Monthly Archives: February 2013

A comment must be made about the screen shots that are on display at One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age Tumblr now. At the moment, home pages from February 1997 are shown. But what one should remember when looking at the dates is that this is when they were updated for the last time. It is the date when a page was given up, not when it was made. What you see is not how the web looked in 1997, but how abandoned pages looked at that time!

For those wondering how the automated tumblr blog One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age Photo Op is made, the graphic below should be enlightening. More on technology, philosophy and historical value of screenshots will follow soon.

If you follow One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age Photo Op on tumblr, you’ve noticed many pages with broken images. You are not surprised, after all these pages are 17 years old right now. Decay fits to this age. But, important to notice, that “age” is not the only reason, or not the reason at all.

I examined the source code of pages with the broken images of the last 24 hours.


original url http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/Field/2035/


original url http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/1249/

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original url http://www.geocities.com/Area51/3198/

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original url http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/3162/

In cases above the reasons for images not being displayed is that they were included from external servers. Users “hot-linked” to files and services that, very probably, seized to exist even before Geocities went down.

In the cases below, users included images stored in the directory “pictures”, right under the root directory of the main Geocities server. How the <img> tags and their alt attributes appear in the HTML files gives away that this directory was used to store Geocities logos and other standard graphics like buttons and bullets. As it seems, none of them was saved during the rescue action of Archive Team. And Yahoo shut it down, though other directories with templates and backgrounds are still available. (Read more about ancient Geocities directories still accessible today in A First Sensation and The Ghost of Geocities.)

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original url http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/7990/

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original url http://www.geocities.com/TheTropics/4884/

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original url http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/5197/

Many users spread their files over several accounts, for example the creator of Tokyo/4379 had another account for storing images at Tokyo/5261. The second directory was not archived (and doesn’t appear on reocitie’s list as well).
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original url http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/4379/

Here is an interesting example of a missing image — “INTRO.GIF”, as the source code states. The image is present at the reocities copy of the page, as “intro.jpg” It would be really interesting to know more about the reocities algorithm and approach to recovering pages.
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original url http://www.geocities.com/Area51/6267/

There are many reasons for a webpage to lose its images, but in case of “Misty’s Home Page” there is no mystery. The author just linked all the images to his local hard disc. So they were never ever online! Well, to quote the webmaster: “My first attempt at having a home page […] As soon as I figure out how to do it, I will!”
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original url http://www.geocities.com/WestHollywood/6152/

You can read more about digital ruins in my essay Ruins and Templates of Geocities.

Just got the book Netscape Communicator, published by Academic Press in 1998. “It presents a comprehensive strategy for total mastery of the Internet and of Web content creation.” I’ve skipped many pages and rushed immediately to “Adding Animated GIFs (p.548)”. It is a short chapter of only one and a half pages actually, saying that GIFs are great and as easy to add to your document as any other graphic. You should only know that not all of them are free for “unrestricted use”, but if you want to get free ones go to yahoo.com or … http://www.cswnet.com/~ozarksof/anigif1.htm

Chuck Poynter’s collection was obviously more prominent than I assumed before, and Dancing Girl is the mascot in its header. No wonder hulagirl.gif was spreading around amateur home pages so swiftly.

Read more about null in previous posts: