Difference between revisions of "Recommended Reading"
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== Archives of Interest == | == Archives of Interest == | ||
* '''[http://www.archive.org | * '''[http://www.archive.org Internet Archive]''' | ||
* '''[http://www.archives.gov/ The National Archives]''' | * '''[http://www.archives.gov/ The National Archives]''' | ||
* '''[http://www.webharvest.gov/collections/ Federal Web Harvest]''' gathers material from federal government websites and archives them online. | * '''[http://www.webharvest.gov/collections/ Federal Web Harvest]''' gathers material from federal government websites and archives them online. |
Revision as of 03:50, 15 January 2009
Archives of Interest
- Internet Archive
- The National Archives
- Federal Web Harvest gathers material from federal government websites and archives them online.
- The CyberCemetery is "an archive of government websites that have ceased operation."
- Pandora is Australia's web archive.
- Space Rogue maintains a museum of his old websites.
Web 2.0 Bubble?
It seems like the 2.0 bubble is a bit more resilient than the 1.0 bubble. The name might not be as apt, but the sites could be doomed to suffer the same fate as their forebears due to the recession. These articles are useful because they make a head-count and attempt to survey the situation.
- "Second dot-com bubble" - article at Wikipedia
- "The Web 2.0 Bubble" - article by The Atlantic
- "11 troubled Web companies" - article by CNet
- "Web 2.0 bubble bursting" - article at VentureBeat
New page, please add content --Ross 16:36, 12 January 2009 (UTC)