The biggest moocher in town, serial philanderer, talented landscape painter, brilliant guitarist/lead singer, qualified chef and (last I heard) currently married to wife number five.
Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.
History is littered with hundreds of conflicts over the future of a community, group, location or business that were "resolved" when one of the parties stepped ahead and destroyed what was there. With the original point of contention destroyed, the debates would fall to the wayside. Archive Team believes that by duplicated condemned data, the conversation and debate can continue, as well as the richness and insight gained by keeping the materials. Our projects have ranged in size from a single volunteer downloading the data to a small-but-critical site, to over 100 volunteers stepping forward to acquire terabytes of user-created data to save for future generations.
The main site for Archive Team is at archiveteam.org and contains up to the date information on various projects, manifestos, plans and walkthroughs.
This collection contains the output of many Archive Team projects, both ongoing and completed. Thanks to the generous providing of disk space by the Internet Archive, multi-terabyte datasets can be made available, as well as in use by the Wayback Machine, providing a path back to lost websites and work.
Our collection has grown to the point of having sub-collections for the type of data we acquire. If you are seeking to browse the contents of these collections, the Wayback Machine is the best first stop. Otherwise, you are free to dig into the stacks to see what you may find.
The Archive Team Panic Downloads are full pulldowns of currently extant websites, meant to serve as emergency backups for needed sites that are in danger of closing, or which will be missed dearly if suddenly lost due to hard drive crashes or server failures.
To use ArchiveBot, drop by #archivebot on EFNet. To interact with ArchiveBot, you issue commands by typing it into the channel. Note you will need channel operator permissions in order to issue archiving jobs. The dashboard shows the sites being downloaded currently.
There is a dashboard running for the archivebot process at http://www.archivebot.com.
ArchiveBot's source code can be found at https://github.com/ArchiveTeam/ArchiveBot.


46 comments:
Your brother sounds a riot and a right pain in the a***, if I may be so blunt LOL
I have two brothers and thankfully they are both lovely. :)
This would be soooo funny if it wasn't true. They say blood is thicker than water, but that just means its so much messier to mop up (as Paige knows so well).
You should fictionalize the people in this post and write it as a novel. I am not kidding! Your brother has such a scoundrel-like quality. A lovable yet worthless flamboyant womanizer who can charm the bloomers off any gal and empty her purse at the same time. I am not kidding...you've got a novel here! Get busy, Shrinky!!! Don't make me come over there and sleep on your couch!!
You are right on both fronts, count your blessings, Ake (wink)!
I agree with Myth, but I also know that writing our pain down for all to read...is rather difficult at times. (for we all know that we share the laughs, but the emotions that are beneath are much more tender) And sometimes the guilt we feel is all messed up with the anger....lol, do I sound like I've been there? You did an amazing job describing him, and I do wish him well.... Love you
Oh Dan, and don't I know it (suppressing a chuckle), you sure do have a wonderful way of reading straight to the nub of it. He always sends his love via any phonecall he has with my sister (the only one who still maintains contact with him), and expresses no hard feelings I keep him at arms length. In his heart, I think even he is surprised I allowed him to get away with so much for so long!
You have a point, this sure could turn into a wonderful sit-com.
And for the record, there will ALWAYS be a place reserved on my couch for you (grin).
Love is complicated. There are people you love. Then, there are those you hate. And then there are those you love to hate. And those you hate to love. You should call your bro and talk to him. Just know your boundaries. (You will feel good if you do this...)
Now back to this book you need to write on some other dedicated blog site. So, get this picture. I am loafing on your couch, scratching myself and eating potato chips and drinking beer. And every time you glance over, I say, "Shrinky get back to writing that story!!!" :)
.
Wow! That is crazy stuff! Along the lines of mythopolis, I was thinking that this might be one of your works of fiction! But as they say, real life is always stranger than fiction!
Doesn't it seem that often the smartest and most talented people you know are also the worst rogues? And it's also true that we'll someone a lot if they can make us laugh.
Yes, I have nephew who finally used up all his chances with me a few years ago. Unfortunately for him, he didn't make me laugh or he might have gotten a fifth (or would it be sixth?) chance. My sympathies, Shrinky!
I echo the sentiments of those who suggest making it a book (or sitcom). I could tell YOU stories, but that's for another time! :D
I think you understand, Chantel, yes. Mind, we are all a sum of our experiences, the funny, sad, ridiculous and painful, and as these shape us into who we are, so the people who flit through our lives also influence how we think and write. I do believe Ian has unwittingly contributed to certain character traits I've occasionally pulled upon when shaping a few of my characters. (x)
Haaaaaaaaaa, oh Dan, what a picture you paint, it's enough to drive any girlie back to focus on her "other" dedicated blog site. You may be a slave driver, but a very encouraging one (hugs)!
Isn't that so very often the case, Bijoux? (smile)
Ah Barbara, I think you know of what I write, too. Yes, isn't it sad how often those who are the most talented are also often the most careless of those who love them?
I do believe I may well take you up on that one day, dear Leslie!
Ian sounds like the guy my best friend finally ditched. Brilliant, with a guitarist's hands and full of zen-sounding sayings that he unfortunately does not TRULY follow. This Ian has landed on his feet and has been willed his late stepmother's house, paid for. She struggles on the brink of bankruptcy.
She blames herself, mind you, as much as she blames him... but having watched the dissolution, the fallout is not funny.
YET... with the right writer, one COULD see it on the screen and laugh and cry.
I'm all in favor of memoir or fictionalized memoir, as you would fair know! You did a STELLAR job of relating the charm while not withholding the wounds and the flaws.
Feh. Brothers. You have been a good sister and that is not lie!
Wow what a brother! Now mine, on the other hand, is a surly old bastard who has come here to visit us (includes our parents) exactly twice in 20 years. With Mom's Alzheimer's you would think he could make time to see her perhaps once a year? Once every other? So sad. I am sad for my parents who know he doesn't give a damn and is waiting to inherit.
Write it!!
I am an only child - I draw on my independence - thank god! You seee..............I have a sister in law from hell! Currently..........she doesn't want to talk to me! Hnnnnnnnnnmmmmmmmmm
I've had many alcoholics in my life I've had to kick out....er....let go of. It's necessary to walk my own thin line of sanity. It grows narrower every year. love you, Shrinky!
I have one brother I don't even talk about.
My brother and sisters are fine and we can and do occasionally enjoy a laugh together. Now I have an 80+ uncle that had a wild life. We all love him now but he had been thrown out of a number houses/bars/cars, just about anything you can be throw out of.
So sad that you no longer see your brother but I can so understand why. I'm sorry for this loss but it sounds like you're doing the best you can.. including holding on to the fond memories.
I know some people like your brother. One, quiet well. He has managed to keep a steady job for about 13 years, but has NO CLUE how to manage money. He always manages to have the latest toy, or whim, to heck with paying electric bills, etc. He's charming, too, I just don't fall for it anymore. I can't afford to.
Wow, sounds like a character that one couldn't make up! Lots of pain with the laughs.
Oh Shrinky, he does sound a right pain in the butt. But I bet you would be surprised at the love and fond memories he has of his little sister (you, girl!) somewhere in his outlaw heart.
I love everything you write. Just thought I'd make sure to tell you that.
Yeah, I think we all know, (or have known) at least one Ian.
Always very clever and talented, and often also very beautiful.
It's such a shame,,,wasted life, but I wonder if he'd go back and change anything if he could? I think
that often they'd say no.
(aren't you proud I kept this comment so short? Well, for me, short)
But yes,,,do write it,,,,it's something people would relate to,and I'm sure it would sell.
I think every family has one. I always wonder what my charming brother could have been if he had taken control of his drinking and drugging. He, too, is a talented musician and every so charming.
Aw Jeannette, thanks for that! Yes, sadly the wreckage these types can leave in their wake is often horrendous - and the infuriating thing is, they rarely even see, never mind acknowledge it. I hope your friend comes out stronger and wiser for the experience.
Oh Portia, I would surely want to THROTTLE him! I truly believe these personality types are tinged with a large sprinkling of sociapathic narcissism, don't you?
Ach Dan, I'm trying - honest Guv'!!
Awww Denise, that sucks - there is always ONE, isn't there?
Ha! I empathise, Secret Agent - my eldest recently asked, "Does this Uncle Ian of ours actually EXIST?" He has no recollection of ever meeting him, there isn't even so much of photo of him up on display.
I think I would love this Uncle of yours, Bill - but then, I've never had to bail him out of stuff!
I've been selective with what I've shared of Ian in this post, Hilary - there is another side to my brother which frankly scares me - I do not want him around my children (shrug).
That sure sounds like the voice of experience, Ms. A, sadly, I totally understand where you are coming from - but I wouldn't lose any sleep if I were you, his kind will always find someone else to move on to, and milk dry!
I think what pains me the most Sage, is the incredible potential he wastes. He could have done so much more with his life..
Sorry Margaret, but no, I've outlived my usefullness to him. People in his world exist to be used, if they are not for him, ergo, they are against him - and therefore the enemy!
Haha, oh Ami, you always bring a bright shaft of sunlight into my site - thank you, dear lady!
My dearest Babs, I LOVE you take the time to leave such great observations from my posts, would that there were more of you around! And I suspect you are so right, the only regrets I believe Ian has, is of the wells he's run dry..
Frustrating to the nth degree, isn't it #1 nana?
I yiyi, families are complicated, aren't they.
This is a wonderfully told story albeit it a tough one.
xoxo jj
Another well written story Carol. Is it really true I wonder? - Dave
Hi Dave, sadly, my friend, every word in here is totally true - life is often stranger than fiction, isn't it?
Aw, thanks JJ (smile) - yup, family is often a complex and frustrating mix of the good and the bewildering..
He sounds like a piece of work, but I know what you mean. There were quite a few lovable rogues in my family. I probably qualified as one myself, twenty years back. Here's hoping he gets onto the path both he and others need.
Post a Comment