Hi People!
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.

Hi People!
Hello Lovely Internet Friends!
It is Spring and flowers are beginning to show their glorious petals here in the PNW. I had planned to post some pictures but the crank fell off the aged laptop and it's all too much. You'll just have to trust me on this one. Here's what I have seen around these parts:
Camellia, forsythia, snow drops, crocus, daffodil, hellebore, probably some others, and now the cherry blossoms are starting. Cherry blossoms and plum blossoms which people often confuse, but both are starting to bloom and it's all a delight.
It's still chilly and wet here. We had a couple of days where temps rose to 60 degrees fahrenheit and everyone rushed outside and basked like lizards. Then it snowed again. Oh, just a dusting this time, as opposed to the February storm where they predicted a dusting and we got nearly a foot. How fun it must be to work as a weather prognosticator. Do they have special dice, do you think?
I have a new job, of sorts. It's unpaid and it's every day. My brother has finally acknowledged that he can't take care of our father all on his own. He moved in with the old guy several months ago (maybe a year?) but being mostly deaf, he doesn't always hear it when Dad gets up and wanders off. A month or so ago Dad decided to take a walk early one morning. He wasn't wearing much - just a t-shirt, boxers, and a blanket. He made it the end of the block, crossed the street, and took a tumble partway down the next block. Thank the Goddess for kind neighbors! They discovered him lying on the sidewalk, brought out a pillow and another blanket, and called 911.
As it happened, I was on the phone with 911 at the same time reporting him missing. I raced over to the house, picked up my brother, and met the emergency services. They took him to the hospital to be checked out and amazingly he had no broken bones and no concussion. He needed a couple of stitches along one eyebrow and the doctor kindly said that he would sew it carefully so that Pop wouldn't be left with a scar. Lol.
The tricky thing is that this is the third time that emergency services have had to intervene with our dad. My brother realized that if it continues social services will be called and Dad will be whisked away to a secure facility. That's not what our dad wants and it's not what we want for him. We managed to keep our mom at home during her final days and we will do the same with dad. Fingers crossed.
I've got the day shift. I go over at 11am when dad is up and having his morning oatmeal. My brother goes home to his own house and rests and does whatever the heck he does. I give Dad his lunch, help him to the toilet, chat with him, watch tv with him, and, mostly, watch him sleep. He sleeps a lot. That's fine. He's not much of a conversationalist any more. His memory is good on ancient history but not good on much else. Still, he's cheerful and almost always in a good mood. He remembers who we are. He's always glad to see us. It could be much worse. My brother comes back around 5pm and sorts out dinner and I go home.
I had thought that this year, post-pandemic, I would finally get around to visiting some friends and relatives. I had a plan for a big summer car trip circling through the western US with stops at various cousins' houses. I will have to postpone that trip. I don't know how long this caretaking gig will last, but I'm in it for the duration. Well, I'll be taking off a weekend at the end of April to attend the granddaughter's first birthday celebration. Looking forward to that!
So, that's what's going on around here. Meanwhile, the sun is breaking through the clouds and it looks like it will be at least partly sunny today. More rain in the forecast for tomorrow but such is life in this well-watered region.
Have a beautiful day, friends!
I'm heading up to the Seattle area today. Going to help the Kid get some stuff in order before the Big Event. She has asked me to sort out her linen closet and laundry room, and help get the baby's room in order. I'm also taking a few things up that she left here.
We had a baby shower for her at the end of March. My two buddies came up for that - in fact, they did most of the organizing for it. It was a small event, my two pals, me and the Kid, the neighbor, my cousin, and one friend from work. All the other guests were on Zoom. We had a pregnant woman and an immune compromised woman in attendance and while the mask mandate has expired the virus has not. Doesn't hurt to be careful.
The only thing that Zoe asked for was books. She received quite a variety! There are so many new and wonderful books for small children out there! I was hoping that the other mums who she knows would have a great selection of new reading material and I was not disappointed. There's even one with a bi-racial gay dad couple. Big thumbs up from this grandmother! Seriously, though, I need to find some baby books with lesbian grannies... if any of you have seen one, let me know!
Of course, she also got a bunch of other stuff. Super cute clothes, practical baby gear, stuff that I have absolutely no idea what it is for... good thing that Zoe's on top of all of the new stuff. There is so damned much equipment involved in childrearing!
I'm planning on being there for several days. Then I'll come home and wait until I get the call for the big event. Originally the baby was due in early May but the doctors have moved the date up a couple of times. Once because of measurements and once because of Zoe's blood pressure. It's borderline too high and they don't want to take a chance of her developing pre-eclampsia. So, now they are inducing labor on the 21st of April. That's just two weeks away!!!
Zoe and her husband have asked me to come up and stay when they bring the baby home. They are nervous, naturally. I'm sure they won't need me for as long as they think they will (Rob asked if I could come for a month, lol). But, I'm happy to help. I think that I'll mostly be doing things like walking the dog, cooking dinners and washing clothes, but that's cool. I'm super rusty when it comes to infants! I've only had one and it was quite some time ago... what if I have forgotten everything? Just something else to worry about.
I'm also going to cook and freeze some meals for when I leave. Nothing says I love you like a pan of enchiladas! They live too far from civilization to have those meal prep services delivered so I'll prepare in the old school way. Frozen casseroles to the rescue! Lol.
That's all I've got for now. I'm looking forward to getting some stuff done for the Kid -- she'll be busy real soon!
Cheers!
Because things aren't shitty enough, my beautiful companion Pierre is leaving for the rainbow bridge. The house call vet is coming this afternoon.
I took him to the vet on Friday to get something for a skin irritation that wouldn't go away. They did a blood work panel that showed sky high thyroid levels. I contacted the specialist vet to discuss treatment but before I could even get an appointment he took a steep downward turn.
Wednesday he stopped eating. Thursday I could only get him to have some tuna and tuna water. He is unsteady on his feet, drooling, and just looks really bad. This morning he had a little more tuna water but can barely stand. I can't let him linger in this condition.
The end is nigh. End of the calendar year, of course. The end of civilization is already under way. Soon, the end of life on this rotating rock will be the topic du jour. But, enough of the doomsaying! What about the winter holidays!?!
The Solstice is getting closer, a time to thank the Goddess for the gift of light. It's dark and dreary here lately what with the short days and the incessant rain. I'm not actually complaining about the rain. We need every drop of it, and we need snow on the mountains. I learned a new word, a Scottish word, that perfectly describes the weather here: dreich. Cold, dark, rainy and dreary. Scotland and the Pacific Northwest have some things in common. Lol.
Here are the pleasant updates, pleasant for me anyway.
I finished the writing challenge. National Novel Writing Month asks participants to write 50,000 words during the month of November. It's the tenth year I have done so! This year's effort was a fantasy story involving a cadre of Nature deities defeating Eris and her nephews in their attempt to break open the radioactive storage containers at the Hanford nuclear site and poison the mighty Columbia river and everything around it. In my stories, the good guys always win. (Really, the good gals, since the majority of my characters are female. A writer's prerogative, and a lesbian prerogative.)
Here's the really big news:
The Kid is pregnant! She is having a girl in early May! I am happy because she is happy. I mean, yes, it will be fun, and gift giving holidays will be super fun. There is an element of existential dread here, though. If she had never reproduced, I would only have her to worry about. Now I will have to worry about a future generation. Can one worry from beyond the grave? I'm not sure, but I'll attempt to let you all know at some indefinite time in the (hopefully) distant future. I have always, always cared about the planet, but now I have to care about it for infinity. That's exhausting! Oh, well, in the immediate time frame we have something fun to look forward to. So, there's that.
Cheers, women! I hope your December is full of happiness and health, and a blessed return of the Light.
It's been ten years since my mom died. Here's what I texted to my immediate family:
Today is the ten year anniversary of the death of our beloved matriarch.
First of all: I can't believe it's been that long.
Second: ten years has not dulled the pain of that loss.
Third: I am grateful to have had her as long as I did.
Fourth: I know I don't grieve alone.
I made an apple cake this morning. I'm going to take a chunk over to Grampy and Walter later. I'm not sure if they are marking the occasion but I am. I need a little bit of acknowledgement of our profound loss. Not sure I'll get it from them. But, in my heart, we are all united in singing her praises, telling funny stories, and keeping alive her memory. But that's just in my heart. Mostly likely I'll be celebrating her on my own. But, I WILL celebrate the amazing person that was my mother.
(Steps off soapbox)
Xoxox xoxox xoxox'
#
To their everlasting credit, they all responded to my text immediately. It's true that I don't suffer her loss alone. We all feel it. We all mourn her. I guess there is a comfort in being able to share a memory of someone dear with a person who knew them. Some kind of shared spark of memory. A connection.
Ok, well, I'm going to get ready to go to my dad's. See ya!
Finally. It was a long six weeks, but I'm home.
Lisa continues to do well. Her new kidney is working like a champ. No sign of hepatitis C, happily. All the things they test for are within normal range. And, for the first time in decades, she is no longer anemic! Bonus! She's still got a lot of follow up. It is beginning to taper off, though. She has reached the point where she only has to go in once every two weeks, so that's a huge improvement. Everything is pointing in the right direction.
Back here in Portland, autumn is in full swing. Leaves changing color and piling up, temperatures dropping, days very much shorter. I have loads of stuff to catch up on. But, it's all the normal stuff and it feels good to be futzing around at home.
My next goal is to get my dad a booster shot, and one for my brother and me. Dad had Pfizer, I think, so that won't be difficult. Brother and I had J&J, so we're in a holding pattern. But, we'll get it done. I do feel bad about getting a booster when so much of the world hasn't gotten even one shot yet, but I don't want to jeopardize my dad's continued survival.
What else is going on? Nothing. Ahhhhhh......
Things are going well down here in SoCal. Lisa continues to heal. She is gaining in mobility and oxygen capacity. She's moving better. Her kidney is working like a champ. Dialysis is very hard on the body so there is a long recovery period from that in addition to the recovery from major surgery.
We are now back in Long Beach. Her in-person appointments have decreased from four per week to just one. We will drive down to San Diego on Monday, stop at the lab for a blood draw and urine test, and then wait several hours for the clinic appointment. After that, it's back to the LBC. I will driver her down two times and then she'll be on her own. Fingers crossed! Actually, she might enlist the help of her neighbor for a while. The hard part is that she can't eat before the blood draw. A two hour drive on an empty stomach first thing in the morning (or longer, depending on traffic), is not something to look forward to with delight. Still, it beats living in a hotel.
I'll be returning home on the 12th. I cannot wait! I don't like being away from home for long periods of time (especially this long!) And, honestly, no matter how great the friendship, 6 weeks makes it wear thin. We've had a small handful of spats but gotten over them quickly. Still, for someone who lives alone and isn't the most social of individuals, it is taxing. But, it's almost over. I can see the finish line from here. Wish me luck!
Observations by and about People Like Us from the east bank of the Willamette River.
