Using the Hotbot search engine to search through MonkeyJunkies mailing list entries (powered by Majordomo) to find articles teaching Netscape 4 only DHTML JavaScript posted on WebMonkey.
This is similar to what happened to TheWebMachine which hosted tutorials for Photoshop/illustrator and family and simple HTML and a bit of PHP (anyone remember Shoutboxes?). "Rough around the edges" is acceptable, IMO, if you're doing this for fun. But Wired is a business and without sufficient relevance, they probably thought it wasn't worth the effort to keep it active.
So long, Webmonkey. Thanks a lot for the "Sizing Up the Browsers" article from 1999.[1] I referred to it every time I made a website that was best viewed in NN4 or IE5 at 800x600 resolution.
In case anyone is interested in some really old stuff, I recently dug up some of my articles from 1997 for a Wired/Hotwired reunion. Here's a doc with some pointers to the wayback machine:
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 35.4 ms ] thread1998 indeed was a different time!
Flash 4 was also really fun to muck about with.
1. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-lAXqRCQ-u9U/Tk64A0f97II/AAAAAAAAAo...
[1] http://web.archive.org/web/20000302050428/http://hotwired.ly...
They haven't updated it still. Awesome.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1mIMWHlxe_SFilR2YTzGCAmlF...
The 'WebMonkey' brand has a decent amount of cred - why doesn't Wired try to transition it into a proven model, like the Envato 'Tuts' sites?
I guess if they've already tried to resurrect it several times (as the article states) and still couldn't pull it off, I must be missing something.
Still, seems a shame...