@neauoire I put a lot of the blame on the standardization of LAMP and other complex, dynamic server-side frameworks. Static sites are way easier to keep online for decades even if your generator or editor software has bit-rotted away. We can hope that the SSG trend will help reverse the tide.
@praxeology Agreed. Though some SSG should not be called SSG. My experience with some is that I've spend more time fixing the SSG install than adding pages to my website. @neauoire
@xuv@neauoire That sounds annoying. But you have to admit, even if you never get it fixed, your existing content can still stay up for another 20+ years.
@xuv@neauoire If your site runs on PHP, python, ASP.NET or any other server-side dynamic language, it's not a question of IF but WHEN it will go down, never to return.
@xuv @neauoire If your site runs on PHP, python, ASP.NET or any other server-side dynamic language, it's not a question of IF but WHEN it will go down, never to return.