If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
I need to ask a question about web pages but I don't know which
newsgroup to ask. Any suggestions please. I looked for alt.comp.internet but I don't see anything like that on AIOE. Thanks -- Ed Mc Nam Vet '66-'67 Semper Fi |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
Motor T wrote:
I need to ask a question about web pages but I don't know which newsgroup to ask. Any suggestions please. I looked for alt.comp.internet but I don't see anything like that on AIOE. Thanks "Web pages" is a bit vague. Do you mean creating them? HTML question or Javascript, or something else? Are you wondering why your browser won't show one? Try to narrow it down for us a bit. -- Tim Slattery |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
On 6/12/2013 5:41 AM, Tim Slattery wrote:
Motor wrote: I need to ask a question about web pages but I don't know which newsgroup to ask. Any suggestions please. I looked for alt.comp.internet but I don't see anything like that on AIOE. Thanks "Web pages" is a bit vague. Do you mean creating them? HTML question or Javascript, or something else? Are you wondering why your browser won't show one? Try to narrow it down for us a bit. I would like to know how current the information I am reading on any "how to" type web page is. If I'm seeking an answer to a question say: 'what is the procedure for boarding an international flight'? How do I know the page wasn't made in 2004? Is there a way to gleen the date the page was posted? Thanks for replies. -- Ed Mc Nam Vet '66-'67 Semper Fi |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
Motor T wrote:
I would like to know how current the information I am reading on any "how to" type web page is. If I'm seeking an answer to a question say: 'what is the procedure for boarding an international flight'? How do I know the page wasn't made in 2004? Is there a way to gleen the date the page was posted? Thanks for replies. You can right-click on the page, and choose "View Page Info" (in Firefox, other browsers should have something similar). That will give you some info, I don't think that it's entirely reliable. The short answer is you really don't know when it was posted. -- Tim Slattery |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
Tim Slattery wrote:
Motor T wrote: I would like to know how current the information I am reading on any "how to" type web page is. If I'm seeking an answer to a question say: 'what is the procedure for boarding an international flight'? How do I know the page wasn't made in 2004? Is there a way to gleen the date the page was posted? Thanks for replies. You can right-click on the page, and choose "View Page Info" (in Firefox, other browsers should have something similar). That will give you some info, I don't think that it's entirely reliable. The short answer is you really don't know when it was posted. There is a way. Use www.archive.org, enter the URL of the page in question. View the captures, and move the date back in time, until the page content changes. The earliest page, consistent with what you're seeing, is a rough approximation of when the page was written. Archive.org is sometimes used in court cases, for proving when something was stolen or copied. It doesn't copy everything (it's only a 5500 TB server after all), but it's a place to start. Paul |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Internet help
On 6/12/2013 1:35 PM, Paul wrote:
Tim Slattery wrote: Motor T wrote: I would like to know how current the information I am reading on any "how to" type web page is. If I'm seeking an answer to a question say: 'what is the procedure for boarding an international flight'? How do I know the page wasn't made in 2004? Is there a way to gleen the date the page was posted? Thanks for replies. You can right-click on the page, and choose "View Page Info" (in Firefox, other browsers should have something similar). That will give you some info, I don't think that it's entirely reliable. The short answer is you really don't know when it was posted. There is a way. Use www.archive.org, enter the URL of the page in question. View the captures, and move the date back in time, until the page content changes. The earliest page, consistent with what you're seeing, is a rough approximation of when the page was written. Archive.org is sometimes used in court cases, for proving when something was stolen or copied. It doesn't copy everything (it's only a 5500 TB server after all), but it's a place to start. Paul Very helpful replies. Thank you Tim and Paul. -- Ed Mc Nam Vet '66-'67 Semper Fi |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|