- Joined
- Jul 11, 2022
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If you have trouble with this, set winhttrack's browser agent to 'ie6'; basically no website turns away Grandma's 2001 dial-up with Niggernet Exploder 6.HTTrack can be used (with varying levels of success) to archive websites
The enterprise side respects closed networks, so its possible to set up an offline domain controller and push updates to windows through it (this was done at both the places I worked). Its almost certainly true of osx as well. As far as home networks go I think both companies stance is 'i hate you and hope you die' so you are pretty much stuck with linux thereOne thing I haven't seen mentioned is how to locally mirror software repositories, which would eventually be a requirement for getting new OS installs up and running in a scenario where the Internet is unusable. There is a good guide for doing this across a number of different Linux distros available here: https://www.dbi-services.com/blog/using-offline-repositories-and-local-packages-for-installation/
The basic summary of this process is that you use one computer to mirror the software repositories, then use that computer as a repository mirror that others can install software from over LAN.
This only applies to Linux, since current versions of MacOS and Windows are too dependent on the Internet to even be usable in this scenario. I am sure something similar can be done with BSD too, but that is outside my knowledge. And perhaps Windows XP, Vista, and 7 would still be installable offline, though I can't say I have tried at all.
Precisely. So for Windows users, keeping software is going to be a lot more of a manual process; it will require keeping all the installer files for the software you want to use, and verifying that each installer actually works while offline. Many don't nowadays, in which case you will just have to copy the entire CThe enterprise side respects closed networks, so its possible to set up an offline domain controller and push updates to windows through it (this was done at both the places I worked). Its almost certainly true of osx as well. As far as home networks go I think both companies stance is 'i hate you and hope you die' so you are pretty much stuck with linux there
I would assume it's here. Though /Zoosadism seems to be deleted, it used to have a big warning page that said this was bad stuff and illegal to view in certain jurisdictions like Oregon.@Null you recently eluded to having a massive archive of quality Internet video, would you care to share any videos/info? Or is it all on /archive/?
No one really needs them to be rewritable. Much of what I want to store is in its highest resolution, final format. Books, flac audio. If it was bulk enough, I'd be getting 4k bluray rips. And price isn't an issue either, even if a drive cost $50,000... I would make it work. My great-great-nth-grandchildren would cherish the library I put together for them. But I think the science fiction technologies are going to be out of reach forever.On the bulk/archival side, nanoetched quartz discs are a possibility that could store hundred of terabytes "forever" but aren't going to be rewritable. To repl