 I am sure a lot of you are probably familiar with the Wayback Machine and Archive.org. I've mentioned Archive.org and previous videos about just archiving stuff. And not only can you archive, you know, things like photos and videos and pretty much any other type of file, you can also archive websites there. Well, they archive sites automatically. They crawl the internet every once in a while and you can do something like filmsbychris.com and search the browser history there and give it a second here. It gives you a little date chart of dates that it archived, the website. So I can go back and this is pretty neat. I wish that there were more archives in here of my website, but I can go back to like 2004 and find a date where they archived my site. So the earliest back looks like 2004, March 24th. They took a snapshot of my website, which looked like this minus this bar up top here. So this is what my website looked like back then. Pretty horrible. A little bit of flash right there. It was mainly, that's back when I mainly did wedding videos and so it was, you know, promoting my wedding video work. And in 2005 they took one snapshot and so if I click there on January or February 1st, there's not much here. It has the counter from that day and then the rest of the site was completely flashed at the time. I know. I know. It was 2005, did I just say? So it was just at the time where I just started probably switching to Linux and but at the time it's like everybody use flash and it just seemed like a cool thing to do. So obviously that one didn't archive too well, but I know like the 2009 which is probably when I first started doing videos for you guys on YouTube. So we can go here to November 14th and see what my page looked like at the time then. And this is what it looked like here. It's not the fastest loading up these archives, but there we go. That's what I'm page now. Not every link is going to necessarily work, you know, because it depends on whether they archived all the links, if the remote links especially, you know, to YouTube stuff or whatever. So a lot of you probably already know that, but it's fun especially if you have a website to go back and see all the different variations you had or maybe there's a site that you used to like to go to that isn't up anymore, they might have it archived here. But again, like look, there's very wide gap here where they didn't archive my site and, you know, it's sporadic. But let's say you make some changes to your website and you want to make sure that they get archived for future reference. You can also put in your site here so I can go filmsbychris.com and I can click save page and it will, I can go to the latest, show all, oh, we could if I typed the whole filmsbychris.com. There we go. Save page. And we'll start archiving the page as it currently is and then you can get a link to it and that way you can, you can save that link and, you know, hopefully archive.org is around for a long time. They are a nonprofit. They do fundraising each year. You can see a donate button right there. But their goal is to archive websites and it'd be great in 10 years from now or 15 years from now or 20 years from now. My website's changed a lot and I want to feel nostalgic and go back and see what my page looked like. I can go back here. I can search and I can see what it looked like today from what they archived. You know, again, if you have a lot of links going off site, you know, there are certain things that they can't archive. But for the general purpose, you can see right here. This is what we'll look like. If archive.org is still around in 20 years, I should be able to go back and look at my page like this and hopefully they are. There are other services out there like that and it doesn't hurt to also, you know, back up and archive your own websites locally. But it's nice to have these online backups that you can quickly go to, you know, just for the nostalgia if nothing else. So go ahead, check that out, you know, web.archive.org or you can just type in the way back machine in Google and you should be able to find it and, you know, go and search for some websites you haven't seen in years and think about, you know, type it in your address if you've made some changes since their last archive and make sure they get your page archived with those changes. Thank you for watching. Please visit filmsbychrist.com and as always, I hope that you have a great day.