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I loved this site and the way the articles were written. Thanks to everyone (especially Scott) who contributed to it over the years.
Web monkey helped me a ton in my younger years. Thanks for all the fish!
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.

1998 indeed was a different time!

Flash 4 was also really fun to muck about with.

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.
Remember the interview show HotSeat with John McChesney? Ah, the early days of Real Player.
Hard to believe they couldn't have made a go of this.

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...