Almost anyone who's learned any amount of VBA in the last 20 years knows the name Chip Pearson.
Millions have visited his website, always packed full of easy-to-understand instruction and lateral thinking in the form of countless code samples, hundreds of free downloadable sample files and complete solutions, and superior advice that appealed to novice and veteran coders alike.
Sadly, Chip is no longer with us. Equally disheartening is that his website's host took down his amazing content almost immediately.
I constantly cite cpearson.com when answering questions, such as just now with a question I was just attempting to answer. I knew of a "perfect resource" with the exact explanation that OP needed, but explained far better than I ever could — but Chip's page is down. 😭
So, I did this:
I may have bent a rule or two by doing this so I wanted to be upfront about it... because I would like to add more of Chip's content in this manner.
I have been in contact with his [Australian] domain registrar and the [American] hosting service in hopes of reviving the site (taking up a collection if necessary) so the***pure gold*** that is cpearson.com doesn't have to disappear, and so that countless others will benefit from the timeless lessons within.
Unfortunately, the host is unable/unwilling to release anything without a court order since (as far as I know) Chip has no surviving next-of-kin except for his elderly parents (who've just lost the last of their 3 children.) Archive.org and cached Google pages have some pages stored, and I there are probably others (like me) who have a stash of favourite "Chips". Unfortunately, I've not found a complete source as of yet.
Suddenly I realized there's another awesome website who also has a mission of carrying programming knowledge and to this generation and the next†, in an accessible and easy-to-understand format. I believe you know which site I'm referring to!
†Stack Overflow's principles surrounding inclusion, and our shared responsibility for the next generation of programmers, are discussed in this video of Jon Skeet's recent visit to the Stack Overflow Head Office in New York.
I can guarantee Chip would want nothing more than to have his legacy carry on this form: "we", the coding community, "poaching and re-blogging" his code at will (as long as there is no profit being made in any form; it is imperative that this content remain both accessible and free, as it was intended.)
Here's how I posted the article:
I asked & answered the question simultaneously. The question is a summary of the topics covered in the post. The primary purpose was to answer a specific question.
I maintained as much of the original formatting as possible - while adjusting some parts to Stack Overflow standards and functionality. (I did include the original section-separator images, and manipulated formatting a little, like centering a few lines. Sorry about that.)
I immediately marked it as a Community Wiki, partly because I feel that earning rep is inappropriate in this case.
If possible, I would like to see a moderator close the Q&A to editing. This doesn't prevent changes - it prevents frivolous changes without a mod's assistance (or perhaps there are better ways of preserving solid content?)
I preserved the author's tagline, giving him credit (although I made a small change to the date, to show the source site's timespan.)
and finally, partly for the sake of transparency, I timed the post with this one, so as to immediately poll the community's opinion.
What does everyone think? Is this okay?
Discussion here is encouraged. If anyone would like to contact me directly (especially any of Mr Pearsons' friends/family who may have some insight) feel free to do so via email at: ashleedawg
. I am still working with the domain and webhost towards possibly reviving the actual site - but Stack Overflow might be an even more central place to give the next generation continued access to this cached gold.
Update:
There is a potential solution in the works, to revive cpearson.com with the support of Mrs. Pearson (Chip's mother). There will likely be a collection taken up towards future funding of the site's hosting fees. I'll provide more information as it become available.
Chip used to report on this site traffic every couple of years, but he gave up on that in the last years so that he could respond personally to more emails and phone calls.
So here are some stats that even Chip wouldn't have been aware of. In the last couple of years the site was up to 50,000 unique visitors per day, reading 80,000 pages per day. That one visitor every 1.7 seconds. In a year, almost half a million ZIP files were downloaded.
All-time traffic today for the site (so far!) 163,300,000 visitors read 287,280,000 pages. All of this excitement over content consisting of only 500 pages and 300 downloadable ZIP files... absolute gold.