2022-11-22 I updated my webpage with a small little project of mine called This Day On The Internet. Finding information on the internet by chronological order has always been harder than it should be. For example, if you wanted to find the Top youtube videos from 2 weeks ago, you'd be hardpressed to find an easy way to do that. This is true even for news articles from major news websites like CNN. In the pre-internet era, all of our latest news and popular trends were organized chronologically. The newspaper and the magazine were literal snapshots in time of the latest trends and hottest cultural issues. I wanted to create the digial equivalent of a stack of newspaper front pages. Fortunately we do have the wayback machine from archive.org but alas, the Wayback Machine is itself pretty tedious to use and only really works one site at a time. I really wanted to have a simple HTML archive just like the early days of the Internet. No matter how technology changes, basic HTML webpages that contain nothing but text and links will always be available to any interested future netizens out there. Another issue is of course infinite vastness of content sources on the Internet. I could only choose an infinitesimally small set of content sources for my snapshots. Since I'm from the USA, the archive will be biased towards American English content sources. But I hope the project will inspire other people to start archiving their own cultural zeitgeist in simple HTML webpages. http://canfood.decsystem.org/thisday/