doikor 14 days ago

These are not pulled from some random website. These are actual internal archives donated from Nokia (well Microsoft Mobile Oy these days)

https://nokiadesignarchive.aalto.fi/about.html

> The Nokia Design Archive is a graphic and interactive portal designed by researchers from Aalto University in Finland. It currently hosts over 700 entries, curated from thousands of items donated by Microsoft Mobile Oy and representing over 20 years of Nokia’s design history — both seen and unseen. You can freely explore the archive, learn about designers’ experiences working in Nokia and discover interesting topics surrounding design and mobile technologies.

You can look at the uncurated collection at aalto university repo https://repo.aalto.fi/index.php?name=SO_b66a9391-dcf8-4399-8... (not sure if all of the materials digitized/online though)

  • CRConrad 6 days ago

    > These are not pulled from some random website.

    Did anyone say they were? In this particular thread?

    > These are actual internal archives donated from Nokia

    Yes yes, that seems quite plausible. But why are you arguing that in response to a complaint about the site's sucky usability? It has nothing to do with the subject at hand.

troupo 14 days ago

How exactly would wayback machine allow you to have a collection of related items and their connection to each other?

How do you go from e.g. Vision 99 (if you manage to find it in Wayback machine) to all related entires? https://nokiadesignarchive.aalto.fi/?node=C0027

  • beAbU 14 days ago

    By using HyperLinks, embedded in your HyperText document written in HyperText Markup Language, that was sent to your terminal using the Hypertext Transfer Protocol.

    This is all 1960s era concepts.

    Literally any wiki style site will be a perfect fit to serve this content.

    • troupo 14 days ago

      > By using HyperLinks, embedded in your HyperText document written in HyperText Markup Language

      Yup, linking millions of documents that you are required to sift through to combine the information you need

      > Literally any wiki style site will be a perfect fit to serve this content.

      And does wayback machine have this "any wiki"?

      Meanwhile the site in question is literally the wiki with hyperlinks you're talking about

      • CRConrad 6 days ago

        > Yup, linking millions of documents that you are required to sift through to combine the information you need

        You just click on the blue underlined text; it's called a "hyperlink". Revolutionary new concept, I know.

        It's not as if that confusing flash-like Captain Web Designer interface works without you clicking on stuff, now is it?