Oops, time passed (anyone else finding that's happening these days?)
On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at 01:43:47PM +0100, Kake wrote:
> On Wed 29 Apr 2020, Dominic Hargreaves <dom(a)earth.li> wrote:
> > Neither cambridge, london or oxford are being actively used or
> > maintained by anyone, as far as I know, for many years, so it's
> > probably time I (not-so?)-gracefully turn them all off.
>
> I have a feeling I’ve made this plea here before, but speaking as a
> local historian, I don’t think these websites should just be deleted.
>
> I agree that it needs to be made very clear that the information isn’t
> current (didn’t london once have a banner at the top of every page
> saying this?), but all three of the above are useful sources for local
> historians, and surely london is also of some interest to historians
> of technology.
London has a message on the front page, but I think that is not as useful.
True, it wouldn't be hard to update the templates, so I'll do that
soonish, and try and tidy up Oxford and Cambridge (spoiler alert, when
I started to do this the other week, I ended up breaking the database,
so it's currently offline awaiting time to resurrect it).
> bob is happy to host the sites if Dom doesn’t want to do it any more,
> and if bob is hosting them then I’m happy to admin them.
If they are truly read-only, and can be cleaned up, there overhead
in running them is small. But on the other hand, running the software
is probably not the most effective way to set up an long-lived
archive. A static HTML export, either hosted locally, or being hosted
by one of the options discussed below, would make more sense.
Something to think about, anyway.
On Thu, Apr 30, 2020 at 05:14:18PM +0100, David Cantrell wrote:
> On 29/04/2020 13:43, Kake wrote:
> > On Wed 29 Apr 2020, Dominic Hargreaves <dom(a)earth.li> wrote:
> > > Neither cambridge, london or oxford are being actively used or
> > > maintained by anyone, as far as I know, for many years, so it's
> > > probably time I (not-so?)-gracefully turn them all off.
> > I have a feeling I’ve made this plea here before, but speaking as a
> > local historian, I don’t think these websites should just be deleted.
>
> Did you know that the British Library has a programme for archiving
> websites? Provided that they are primarily original-content-driven then they
> want to archive even personal sites (they're archiving my cricket blog
> <https://larvalstageumpire.sport.blog/>, for example), so Openguides sites
> would certainly qualify. They may already be aware of the OG sites, but if
> not they're happy to take nominations from the public for sites to archive.
> See here:
> https://www.bl.uk/collection-guides/uk-web-archive
This is very interesting, although it didn't strike me as being the
most accessible set of sites (quite a lot of clicking around to find
content that was actually available to the public). I was going to
suggest the archive.org as being good enough.
Cheers
Dominic
I just noticed through random chance that there was a new release
back in January: https://metacpan.org/release/OpenGuides
I mention in case anyone is interested.
It's been a very long time since I even thought about OpenGuides,
I'm afraid. But since for the first time since I can remember
I got emailed by london.openguides.org (with a user who was
mainly trying ot leave a message about how out of date everything
is). And according to my email archives it's being in "wind down"
state for about a decade... I think it accidentally regained editability
after a sever migration a few years ago.
Neither cambridge, london or oxford are being actively used or
maintained by anyone, as far as I know, for many years, so it's
probably time I (not-so?)-gracefully turn them all off.
Maps on the Oxford Guide appear to be broken - instead of the OSM
tiles they're showing a picture with this URL:
http://tinyurl.com/osmtile1
which redirects to a post explaining that older non-standard OSM tile
URLs have been switched off.
Kake