The failure of the Internet to deliver its promise is particularly noticeable when you hunt for repair manuals for a product from the 90s. Used to be, the information would either be there or not there, finable or unfindable.

Now, there are hundreds of algorithmically generated sites claiming to have it just because it appeared in their search logs, generating potemkin village content traps with endless paging, broken-thumbnail named-like-the-file-you-want but actually-just-ebay-photos bullshit

Even if you find the manufacturer's site it’s more likely than not broken, with a search feature that pulls up what it claims are results but empty divs instead of links, or busted jQuery code from 2013 that prevents anything from loading.

Is it a real but broken site? Is it just another click farm? Does it matter?

@eaton archive.org’s way back machine has saved my bacon for some real obscure stuff, - palm m500 thumb board drivers - but often just as fruitless 😭

The click farms are infuriating though.

@gadgetoid @eaton the true heroes are the random open directories with random lawn mower, laptop, generators, trucks, etc workshop book and manual scans going back to the 80s
@DarkestKale @eaton this is extremely true, getting harder to find and “index of /“ searches are broken these days too 😭