πŸ‘Œ

Okay. Almost there.

The post-Oslo explainer is very long, but it has to be, and I think I've done as right by the balance of material as I can.

Time for a walk in the dreary grey, then some squinting at links and numbers (good grief, do they ever keep rising), and then...

30 years of regional politics and the implications we need to consider, whenever we in the West feel an urge to go around shooting off about what "should" be done to secure Middle Eastern peace.

(a.k.a., always πŸ™ƒ) !

As a quick research aside:

Never trust the numbers you see cited from another source on their own. Look for the original article referenced in the one you're using!

Today I spent a tedious amount of time hunting the origin of a figure that had a bibliographic entry, but no trace of that entry in direct searches for the author or title elsewhere.

I finally found the darned thing on Wayback Machine, but boy, am I annoyed that many scholars just copy-pasted a dead link from each other for years!

@MLClark Archive.org (AKA Wayback Machine) is a lifesaver. I've been able to find a lot for my book that exists no more except on Archive.

Thanks to Archive, I was able to prove that a local politician was lying when he claimed he got a document off Obama's campaign web site on a certain date.

@WordsmithFL

It's funny - I use the terms Wayback Machine and Internet Archive for different parts of the same project. Archive.org is where I would find many difficult-to-acquire 17th through early 20th century texts key to my 19th century lit studies - and also some key documents for my novel writing.

But WM just feels more natural when talking about capturing slices of the old internet otherwise lost to time.

Either way, it is a GEM of a repository. :) Well done on the sleuthing yourself!

@MLClark I think most people refer to it as WM. My endnotes refer to Archive.org.

I think there's a technical difference. WM is used to search a URL or keywords. Internet Archive is a more generic search.

I use it mostly to search for defunct URLs ... Not everything gets archived. Videos, for example. Some PDFs are archived but not all.

The politician waved in his hand a document he claimed he'd just downloaded from Obama's web site. The document on that date didn't say what he claimed.

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@MLClark My other lifesaver is Newspapers.com.

has a prequel novel, "Before Tomorrowland," that came out six weeks before the movie. There's a reference to Tesla contacting another dimension.

Using Newspapers, I found a 1900 article where Tesla said he'd picked up radio signals from another world!

The T. writers created a rich universe that's reflected not in the movie so much as it is in the novel. I went down the rabbit hole and found lots more thanks to Newspapers.

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