h a l f b a k e r yThis ain't rocket surgery.
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A somewhat common problem I have is that I will go to the website of a web comic, wait for the site (and all of its flash widgets, bells, whistles, etc) to load, and then have to navigate to 3 days ago and wait by the same amount.
I propose a universally adapted URL shortcut mechanism for sites that
display daily content: affix the number of days you want to go back at the end of the URL.
So, for example, if I want the Dilbert cartoon for Monday,and today is Thursday, I would type:
www.dilbert.com-3
in my browser
(The delimiter could be a question mark, etc.)
Fast version
http://www.dilbert.com/fast People complained when the site changed; this loads slightly faster. [dbmag9, Aug 30 2009]
[link]
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[-] just as useful to type in www.dilbert.com!800x600 or dilbert.com!textonly or dilbert.com18+filter or dilbert.com!mute etc. |
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now if you want to generically pass a parameter string then I'll very happily bun it, but the http protocol is muddy enough without one-off switches. |
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I am not proposing an extension to the HTTP protocol or generic "winding back the clock." |
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What I am proposing is an easy-to-remember CGI argument that is honored by websites that already have links to their previous versions (such as dilbert.com, anything on comics.com, etc.) |
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//easy to remember cgi argument// doesn't that require a .cgi file to execute in the first place ? |
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I think he means MyComic.com/-3
That will get executed by CGI if the server has
request
rewriting enabled correctly. As for the idea [-] ... for
same reason as above comments. |
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Although I'm not sure I'd always remember when the last time I checked it was. |
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For comics I don't check that often, I tend to save the last one I read as a favourite including the date/number, and then use that to continue reading (changing the favourite once I'm up-to-date). |
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