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Jul 30, 2022 at 4:51 comment added Jonathan Leffler And, as of 2022-07-29T22:50:00-06:00, the site is back online.
Jul 29, 2022 at 18:21 comment added Jonathan Leffler As of 2022-07-29T12:15:00-06:00 (a Friday), the port70.net site appears to be down again (same error in Chrome), and it has not been available for some hours now. It's probably appropriate to wait until at least Tuesday before doing anything about it. (I'd forgotten about this — I just did a search in MSO for 'port70' and this popped up.)
Dec 31, 2020 at 23:49 comment added KTibow You could also try linking to a page, like open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1570.pdf#page=550
Dec 30, 2020 at 14:05 comment added Mark Rotteveel @JonathanLeffler Interesting, it works for me on Firefox (on Windows), but indeed not on Chrome.
Dec 30, 2020 at 14:01 comment added Jonathan Leffler @MarkRotteveel: When I tried that URL, it went to the start of the document, not Annex G. Not the very start; it went to the start of Section 1 Scope, on p19 of 701 of the PDF file (using the PDF display in Chrome on a Mac). I am also unsure how to generate the URL from the PDF display — activating the bookmark list, selecting a section and popping up the menu doesn't show a 'copy URL' option. I think there's something in what you say, but I'm not sure how I should be using it in my environment.
Dec 30, 2020 at 13:44 comment added Mark Rotteveel @JonathanLeffler Actually you can link to a section in the PDF by taking the link from the bookmark section, eg open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/… points to Annex G; it is just not a very reable link
Dec 30, 2020 at 5:07 history edited Jonathan Leffler CC BY-SA 4.0
Fix trivial typos
Dec 30, 2020 at 5:06 vote accept Jonathan Leffler
Dec 30, 2020 at 2:09 history edited Jonathan Leffler CC BY-SA 4.0
port70.net is back — document that and suggest that the problem should be considered for other sites
Dec 29, 2020 at 23:47 comment added Gerrit0 Looks like the site is back
Dec 29, 2020 at 17:12 comment added Jonathan Leffler @Siguza — the disadvantage of the PDF is that you can't give a URL that goes direct to the correct section, even paragraph. Otherwise, it is an impeccable source.
Dec 29, 2020 at 17:07 comment added Siguza A note on C11: open-std.org hosts a copy as well: open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1570.pdf
Dec 29, 2020 at 16:46 answer added Glorfindel timeline score: 20
Dec 29, 2020 at 14:25 comment added Jonathan Leffler @JörgWMittag — the vast majority of the answers quote the site (cite the site?) and contain a link to “this is where the information came from”. That is my standard modus operandi; I believe most other answers are similar. Therefore, they are not incomplete or unusable because the relevant text is included, but it is harder for an interested reader to study the context of the quote with port70.net gone AWO.
Dec 29, 2020 at 13:54 comment added Jörg W Mittag Just to state the obvious: Posts must stand on their own, and only rely on their own content. Ideally, text content, also sometimes an image might be required. They should not require following a link. If this causes an actual problem for any post, then that post should not have been on Stack Overflow anyway, i.e. as a question, it is unclear, as an answer it is unhelpful. Of course, links with auxiliary information that lead to nowhere are annoying, and it would be nice if they didn't, but if there is any post that gets broken by this, then it was already broken before.
Dec 29, 2020 at 12:26 comment added Cody Gray Mod And that we would no longer be allowed to use anyway, @Erik, since there's no one left who is accessible to us and has that level of access.
Dec 29, 2020 at 11:42 comment added Erik A Shog9 has rewritten URLs before in a reversible way, see this post. I'm not sure if that counts as "there's an automated solution" or "there probably is a script on a hard drive somewhere that worked at some time for one specific domain, written by someone that no longer works here, and digging it up and getting it to work might be more work than creating a new one from scratch"
Dec 29, 2020 at 11:37 comment added Martin Smith It was in response to the part in the Q " in case the problem is that the registration has lapsed"
Dec 29, 2020 at 11:32 comment added Andrew Morton @MartinSmith That doesn't necessarily mean anything useful, e.g. the site bobpowell dot net is still going but it isn't what it once was (I'm currently half-way through updating the links on SO to point to the Wayback Machine.)
Dec 29, 2020 at 9:14 comment added Martin Smith Domain registration doesn't lapse until 2021-04-02T21:45:48Z
Dec 29, 2020 at 8:08 history became hot meta post
Dec 29, 2020 at 7:46 comment added rene @CodyGray unless you're Jon Skeet, then everything is possible ... ;)
Dec 29, 2020 at 6:30 history edited Jonathan Leffler CC BY-SA 4.0
Clarify 23 users out of 50 results on page 1
Dec 29, 2020 at 5:43 comment added Cody Gray Mod The answer, unfortunately, is that we don't have an automated solution to this problem. Perhaps we could build one, but doing it correctly would require developer involvement. A community-developed solution would be limited to batching and submitting edits from the account of someone who has already earned editing privileges. (Batching is necessary to prevent massive disruptions, given that editing always bumps posts.)
Dec 29, 2020 at 5:21 history asked Jonathan Leffler CC BY-SA 4.0