lost – Data Horde https://datahorde.org Join the Horde! Sat, 27 Feb 2021 09:50:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://datahorde.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-DataHorde_Logo_small-32x32.png lost – Data Horde https://datahorde.org 32 32 Recover Old Browser Games Using The Flashpoint Cache Dumper https://datahorde.org/recover-old-browser-games-using-the-flashpoint-cache-dumper/ https://datahorde.org/recover-old-browser-games-using-the-flashpoint-cache-dumper/#respond Wed, 15 Jul 2020 21:00:00 +0000 https://datahorde.org/?p=951 As Adobe ends support for the Flash Player, archiving classic browser games is more important than ever. Over the coming months, many Flash-based games and experiences will be removed from the web if they haven’t been already.

If you remember playing a browser game in the past on an old computer or perhaps on a current computer, you may still have a copy of the game even you don’t realize it! Because browsers try to improve load times of games and websites, they store files on your computer in something called a cache. The Flashpoint Cache Dumper gathers information about the files in your cache, allowing you to share information that helps locate lost web games with the game preservation community!

The Flashpoint Cache Dumper is simple to run. Simply download the self-extracting EXE file to a USB stick and transfer it to the computer on which you wish to dump the cache (opening a browser to download it directly to the computer is not recommended because it may clear its cache). Extract the files to the desktop on each account from which you wish to dump your cache. Run FlashpointCacheDumper.bat and follow the prompts. You can then send the generated DumpedCacheInfo.7z file, which contains a list of the files in your cache, to #web-cache in the Flashpoint Discord server or send it privately to a Flashpoint staff member. If you have files belonging to a lost game, you may be asked to send the full DumpedCache.7z file. Note that whoever you send these files to will be able to see the websites you visited as well as your computer account username.

The Flashpoint Cache Dumper in Action. Image credit: Flashpoint Database

It is important to note that, because of the way browser caches work, you may not be able to find the game you were looking to recover using the Flashpoint Cache Dumper. The Flashpoint Database wiki page has recommendations for additional methods for recovering lost games.

For more information about recovering lost game files from your browser cache and more detailed instructions on how to use the Flashpoint Cache Dumper, see the wiki post on the Flashpoint Database.

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Community Spotlight: Lost Media Wiki https://datahorde.org/community-spotlight-lost-media-wiki/ https://datahorde.org/community-spotlight-lost-media-wiki/#respond Sat, 23 May 2020 15:00:00 +0000 https://datahorde.org/?p=623 Who are they?

Do you ever recall watching something on TV which was aired once and never again? Or perhaps playing an obscure video game, which no one else seems to know about? These are symptoms of Lost Media, media which is no longer available due to all known copies of it having been destroyed, damaged, rotting in storage or outright lost.

Lost Media Wiki is a community which specializes in documenting such lost media, and trying to recover or piece together any such media which they can get their hands on.

LMWlogoCopy.png

What do they do?

Well they run a Wiki, but of course! The Wiki generally avoids hosting any lost/found media directly, it’s mostly used for documenting information or linking externally to lost/found items.

There are a whole bunch of categories: lost ads, lost literature and even lost puppetry! If it’s lost, they’ll know.

With so many categories navigating the website can be quite a chore, even for active users on the wiki, so every few weeks they make an “update” post to summarize the latest changes.

Beyond their own Wiki, the information they collect is often passed on to Wikipedia or IMDb editors, or YouTubers who help spread the word on these lost items to larger audiences.

How do they do it?

Given a particular piece of media, the question arises as to whether it is indeed lost, or if it ever existed at all. Users can start pages where they report their understanding of the status on a given item.

Later other users who go over these pages can pitch in to verify the information or go hunting after the more elusive lost items. Hunting down lost media itself is perhaps a discussion for another time, but to give an idea of how one might go about this, someone who’s looking for a lost tv-commercial might try searching for VHS recordings which may have captured it.

This database doesn’t come cheap though, for funding Lost Media Wiki turns to Patreon. Neither does the hunt! In order to put pressure on property owners/organisations who might have access to the final copies of a particular media, members run a number of petitions.

How do I sign up?

Well it depends on how actively involved you’d like to be. If you just want to see what’s been lost to time for yourself you can simply browse https://www.lostmediawiki.com.

If you’re looking for people to talk about Lost Media, there’s the calmer forums and the chaotic Discord server.

Or if you think that you’d like to actively contribute, you could sign up for an account on the Wiki to make/edit pages yourself. So then what are you waiting for? Find lost things, today!

Forums - The Lost Media Wiki

Looking to discover other archiving communities? Just follow Data Horde’s Twitter List and check out our other Community Spotlights.

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