Wow, I have just looked at the manuals collection at the Internet Archive site. I
honestly can say I don't like it, but I will say it is because this is not how my mind
works in organizing stuff. I am immediately turned off by the tiling of 'cards"
on the screen and the categorizing of collections. I know it more closely matches tablet
apps and how they seemed to be designed, but I can also say, although I am the user of a
tablet, I am not always happy with that approach. Even switching to the list view within
IA didn't help much.
I think it is great that Bitsavers material can be saved in more than one location,
whether that be identical mirrors on multiple servers or with material copied into another
environment. The point being the access to material and minimizing any risk of it all
disappearing at once. But I agree that correct attribution of where material comes from
is also very important.
And multiple interfaces to how to search and find information can be fine to, as we all
think differently. I just happen to prefer collapsible trees, textual lists, and
drill-down methods more than I do other newer visual methods. My previous experience with
Internet Archives has been mainly looking for old videos from the 1940s, 50s, and 60s
through primarily the Prelinger archive, plus some texts and books that I found through
Google and other search engines, and in using the Wayback machine. Seeing this new
interface to the Internet Archives made it clear that I haven't checked IA since they
apparently redid this interface, and all I can't say is I don't like it, and
clearly if I can't find the item I need from IA through a Google search, then I
won't be trying to find it directly from Internet Archives.
The interface used at the Internet Archive is not Jason's fault. And certainly not so
if the interface changed after Jason had already started his project. But I also feel that
this collection at Internet Archive didn't necessarily help in useful ways to archive
the older computer stuff, at least not that I can see from this initial review. Or if the
collection is still good, the web interface is hindering a proper appreciation of that
material and access to it. It also doesn't help that modern implementations of web
content is all database driven (which the Internet Archive is one such site), which on the
surface ought to be great, but in reality isn't when one no longer has as much control
over the levels and depths of web pages in the same way as direct folders on a file
server. The more flat and eclectic nature of today's web pages, with the expectation
that one will "leap" all over the place within a largely flat structure,
possibly employing
filters to limit choices, is much less useful in this case for archiving and organizing
the material in question than say hierarchical tree structures. At least in my
opinion....
Kevin Anderson
Dubuque, Iowa