Over at Archive.org, there is a magical device called the Wayback Machine, which contains a lot of the internet of days past. I've used it extensively, but not exactly for scholarly purposes.
I've actually had an easy time in this class learning all the materials, because due to my particular internet prescence (spending too much time on the computer since 1998), I've actually used most, and if not all some very similar services, over the course of my internet 'career'.
It's my mom's fault, really. When I was 12 she told me about fanfiction. And being as into X-Men as I was, I immediately alta-vista'd it. The first result was a story about the New Mutants character Wolfsbane committing suicide. Apparently that wasn't traumatizing enough to keep me off the internet.
Anyway, how this relates to the Wayback Machine is I've read (and written) and enjoyed a variety of fanworks and original fiction over the past decade from that inauspicious beginning, but! Nothing is permanent on the internet. Sites and posts go away. Hosting isn't renewed. Files are deleted. People leave. But the Wayback Machine has helped me re-find almost all of them, if I can just dig up the original link.
Webpage building, file organization, information organization, information sharing, are all part of participating in fandom and anytime what I've done all these years as a hobby turns out to be useful I'm a little surprised. But it's good. It means you're always learning.
Also, it turns out I can't write so great when there's other voices going on.
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