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If you're like me, you spend an inordinate amount of time on the internet. Some of my most useful discoveries have been sites I've learned about through Reddit, Facebook, and Twitter; some of the best stuff is out there if you know where to look. My favorite part is discovering new cartoonists on DeviantArt or new comics on Instagram. It's like diving into a whole new world! But how do you find these sites? Sure, Google can answer all kinds of questions; but sometimes it's worth paying more than just a quick visit to some forums or subreddits to find out what people are saying about different aspects of your interests. And sometimes you just want to dig through someone's Google Drive or Dropbox. There's a handy tool for that as well: Reddit's Wayback Machine. It seems simple enough: If someone recently posted about an artist, their website, or a book, it should be online somewhere now. But sometimes you have to dig through a lot of links before finding what you're looking for. The Wayback Machine can help a lot there. The Wayback Machine is a special feature of the Internet Archive created by the Internet Archive project in an effort to preserve and provide access to old versions of websites often removed from modern search engines because they lost relevance (for example, Google moves sites like these off its main index). With Wayback Machine you can find if a website has been saved in the archives. However, it doesn't store images or files so much as snapshots of pages in time. If you click on any snapshot, you will be able to see the site then and there, exactly like it was when the snapshot was made. It's like stepping through time! The last two tabs (Advanced and Bookmarklets) are very helpful for people who work with internet on daily basis . I would suggest using 'Advanced' tab if you plan to visit multiple sites one after another because it allows you to choose which domain(s) you want Wayback Machine to search (choose 'Custom' to get this option). Bookmarklets are shortcuts to the web archive. The two I use most frequently are one that saves the current page (button) and one that searches for a specific URL in the archive (icon). I found out about these from a post by an internet educator named Kevin Hodgson. If you want to explore more, definitely check them out! They're a nice alternative to just bookmarking a page and leaving it that way. This is an example of a comic by artist Noori. He uploads new work to his DeviantArt page every Friday and I like reading it because it is usually funny and has a lot of unexpected twists and turns. It's also very artistic, with the character's faces hidden most of the time. I usually scroll down as fast as I can because as he writes, his writing is (mostly) in English but then suddenly switches into Tamil. There are some words that I don't understand at all, but he doesn't write those parts in English; they're just blank spaces on the page. cfa1e77820
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