jimquan
Nov 21, 02, 10:26 am
Francophiles may wish to plunder and download
a trove of articles dating to 1996:
Destination France (http://www.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/france/index.html
)
Uh, anyone know whats wrong with the link?
Jim
[This message has been edited by Jim Quan (edited 11-21-2002).]
francophile
Nov 21, 02, 11:08 am
http://www.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/europe/france/index.html
Very informative and resourceful compilation of their travel articles.
For other destinations:
http://www.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/index.html
Now if only The New York Times would just allow free access to their receipe archives...
USAFAN
Nov 21, 02, 6:11 pm
Thanks - What e great link, I bookmarked it.
BTW, I had this link before, but I think NY Times changed the "position", and I could not find the list/information anymore.
jimquan
Nov 21, 02, 8:35 pm
If you really like an article I would archive it on your hard drive instead of assuming it will continue to be accessible via url.
i.e. File, Save as, and I pick web archive for file type. Seems to save room.
I've yet to finish archiving the ones I like!
Jim
[This message has been edited by Jim Quan (edited 11-23-2002).]
blairvanhorn
Nov 22, 02, 6:14 am
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by Jim Quan:
If you really like an article I would archive it on your hard drive instead of assuming it will continute to be accessible via url.
i.e. File, Save as, and I pick web archive for file type. Seems to save room.
I've yet to finish archiving the ones I like!
Jim</font>
Good advice.
The NYT often takes an article/articles "off-line" and you need to pay to obtain it. Saving the article(s) to your hard drive is always helpful in case this happens.
jeffreyt
Nov 26, 02, 7:18 pm
Better, I would save this as a pdf file.