>>>>> "A" == Andrew M Bishop <amb> writes: A> What I use is the lasttime index sorted by "date changed" and the A> option 'cycle-indexes-daily = yes' set so that the lasttime index A> shows all of today's pages. This way I just need to work from the A> bottom of the index to the top and the new pages won't get mixed in A> with the older ones.
OK, but don't you get a creepy feeling when the 7th day comes around and there's some lasttimes that you haven't caught up with that are about to get deleted. So my idea is lasttimes that one has to delete or else they mount up. And slice them into chunks so one doesn't have to read much before being able to delete one. Anyways. you might want to name those lasttimes by their dates, that way you could keep on making them without overwriting them. The user then would use wwwoffle-rm or a button or something to remove them after he was finished with them. Anyways, looking at ~/wwwoffle-chunks/index.html we see ... 2003-05-20 12:19 3ec9ace8-lasttime-ae.html 2003-05-20 12:19 3ec9ace8-lasttime-af.html --2003-05-23 14:51 3ecdc4d5-lasttime-ac.html --2003-05-26 03:07 3ed11470-lasttime-ab.html 2003-05-26 03:07 3ed11470-lasttime-ac.html 2003-05-26 03:07 3ed11470-lasttime-ad.html 2003-05-26 03:07 3ed11470-lasttime-ae.html 2003-05-26 03:07 3ed11470-lasttime-ah.html --2003-05-27 05:22 3ed28590-lasttime-aa.html e.g. for 5/23 there originally were a b c ... whatever chunks, but all that is left is c, on 5/26 I must have deleted a few also. In conclusion one can see that me, Dan, never misses reading one web page that he has down loaded, cherishing each byte of wisdom, whereas in Andrew's case web pages just pass in one ear and out the other, and on the seventh day of judgment they pass into unindexed oblivion. Therefore get http://jidanni.org/comp/wwwoffle/wwwoffle-chunks today while I've still got the cells to maintain it, brain wise. -- http://jidanni.org/ Taiwan(04)25854780
