HF393

the radical heft

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Big Problems | I am not an artist! | huge boobs, people and violence abound | they are not ok and you're next


cathoderaydude
@cathoderaydude
sarksus
@sarksus asked:

When researching an Old Thing (any old thing but video/TV things in particular) what resources do you hit up? Either for manuals, reviews, contemporary discussion, etc. I’m wondering if there are any I’m missing beyond Internet Archive, Google Books and Usenet.

That's pretty much it. Internet archive, google books, and usenet. I mean, there's also just websites in general - I spend many, many hours on the goog, pulling up ancient forum threads and random tilde-website reviews with minimal information. Sometimes a page that looks completely useless turns out to have one tiny keyword you haven't seen anywhere else, and it busts the whole mystery wide open. You take that back to google, and suddenly you have a dozen new leads that explain everything. Sometimes I go to google image search and scroll until I actually reach the end of the results, and then I find one thing that turns out to be a lead. It's rough.

EDIT - I forgot to mention this VERY IMPORTANT element: "before:2015"

that's the date when the collapse accelerated. you cannot search for anything whatsoever on the internet without this filter because you will simply be deluged with keyword spam. this doesn't fix it completely, but it makes a huge difference. You can use it on mobile too, and it works on google images and books, where it's even more essential.

If you're trying to look up info about a 1980s laptop, the only way you're going to find a magazine review is by going to google books and searching "toshiba t1100 before:1990." Otherwise you are just wasting your time. It also works with "after:" which filters out the accidental hits on mis-OCRed 19th-century almanacs and shit. 99% of my research is via phrases like "dell pentium after:1991 before:1997"


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in reply to @cathoderaydude's post:

Thanks! Google Image Search is a good idea. Yeah it is rough. It sucks when you can find so little info that you have to resort to looking at literally every result page just in case there’s one good lead within a sea of long-irrelevant results. It underlines how much of the web has been lost. Internet Archive has saved me so many times but often things are just gone.

thanks. interesting, i didn't know Google Books was actually useful, as for me it's usually just turned up book entries containing very limited previews of the full book, if that. somehow it didn't sink in for me that it has full magazine scans... i wonder what else?

A lot of the books have much more substantial previews, but almost none of them are present in their entirety. Also, while they have complete collections of a handful of publications that are very convenient for me - mostly Computerworld and PC Magazine - the breadth of their collection doesn't seem terrific. Anyway, if you filter by "Magazines", it'll exclude all the useless unreadable books.