You are probably viewing the website on your own computer, or you forgot to upload the .htaccess file to your server. Use our step-by-step installation guide to see a working website.
We use a file called “.htaccess” to rewrite URLs. This means that a URL such as example.com/page/ or example.com/page.php will actually redirect to an HTML file. However, you won’t be able to see this in your browser. The content will be accessible on the “pretty URL”. This technique is good for SEO’ers who want incoming backlinks to redirect to the original URL.
There are also a surprising number of people who mix up the demo version and the paid version. If you ordered both, then make sure to use the files from the paid version. And yes, that seems really obvious.
Note that a .htaccess file only works on Apache servers. We can translate this file to work on other servers, such as Microsoft IIS or Nginx for a small additional fee. More than 95% of our customers have a hosting account that runs on Apache, so this rarely happens.
PHP is a server side language, that normally generates html files.
This means you need access to the backend language to download PHP files. The Internet archive never had access to the server/backend of a website, so it does not have these PHP files.
The only thing that the archive has is the html output, that was generated by the PHP file. We can restore this under the old .PHP URL, but it is technically an HTML file.
WordPress is also written in PHP, so for the WordPress integration – we reverse engineer the PHP pages. These pages will not always function exactly like in the original website, but they will look the same.
WordPress also uses a MySQL database, which we also reverse engineer, in case you order the WordPress integration.
The time of delivery depends on the number of pages of the website. A small website is scraped in less than an hour and a large website might take up to a few days. After the scraping has finished, our developer usually delivers the WordPress conversion within 24 to 48h. We guarantee delivery within 72h (not counting weekends).
If your website is extraordinarily large (2000 pages or more) then make sure to read this section. There is no problem for the HTML, but for WordPress integration we provide custom quotation on it.
For a Joomla site, we scrape the HTML output from the Joomla installation. Then – if you order the WordPress conversion – we convert the HTML pages into a WordPress installation. This does come with some limitations, which you can read about on https://www.waybackmachinedownloader.com/en/wordpress-conversion/
The same process is applicable to sites built with CMS platforms such as Drupal, Shopify and Magento. Please note that due to the limitations as described on the URL above, a site with a lot of custom backend code – such as Magento or Shopify – won’t give good results. Ecommerce website will look the same as on archive.org, but it won’t function the same because many objects rely heavily on backend code.
In general, our HTML to WordPress conversion is useful for sites with a lot of content, but with little interaction with the visitor. Good examples are magazines, news sites, blogs etc.
Note: if you still want the website in Joomla, Durpal, Shopify, Magento or any other CMS we can do it in custom way but the cost and timeline varies according to effort.
You can view all files that are available on archive.org via these URLs: https://web.archive.org/details/bowdbeal.com and https://web.archive.org/web/*/bowdbeal.com/* Simply replace “bowdbeal.com” with your domain, to see the total number of available files for your domain.
Note: we might not be able to scrape all files, because the Wayback Machine does not always respond to our request. In general, we try about 5 times to download a file with different IP addresses, before we give up on it.
If it’s an HTML-only website, then you can simply upload the same files to a subdomain like test.domain.com
For WordPress conversions, there are thee ways to test it:
All internet sites are HTML sites. WordPress consists of PHP code that creates HTML files as their output. As a website visitor, you cannot see the PHP code. You can only see the HTML code, that your browser translates into visually appealing pages.
We can recover the HTML files. However, the original WordPress installation and dashboard, which you can access via /wp-admin/ is part of the backend. By definition, website visitors and webscrapers cannot see the backend.
Our WordPress version is a reverse-engineered HTML-to-WordPress conversion, based on our HTML version.
If a site was originally built with WordPress, then you do not necessarily need to order the HTML-to-WordPress conversion. You can simply use only the HTML output of the original WP installation. However, if you want to edit the pages with the visual editor in the WordPress dashboard, then you need the HTML-to-WordPress conversion.
There are basically 3 options:
1. HTML-only version for $10. If a site was originally built with WordPress, then you do not necessarily need to order the HTML-to-WordPress conversion. You can simply use only the HTML output of the original WP installation. However, if you want to edit the pages with the visual editor in the WordPress dashboard, then you need the HTML-to-WordPress conversion.
2. Standard HTML-to-WordPress conversion. This is what most customers buy, and it costs an additional $45. The WordPress dashboard has limited functionality, but you can easily edit text, images, links etc.
3. The high-end HTML-to-WordPress conversion. This version of the HTML-to-WordPress conversion comes with an elegant and user-friendly WordPress dashboard. It is the best choice for future-proof websites that need regular editing, and full compatibility with third party-plugins such as visual page builders. The price depends on the site, but it’s usually between $300 and $2,000.
No, but we can reverse engineer a new database to some extend. A backend file cannot be seen by website visitors. That is the entire definition of the concept “backend”. For example, a visitor cannot download your database or PHP files. Therefore a webscraper cannot download those files either. A visitor or webscraper can only download frontend files, such as JavaScript, HTML/CSS and pictures.
A web scraper basically has the same limitations as a normal visitor. It has no access to the backend of a website. Neither does it have access to a part of the website that is protected by a login process, such as domain.com/wp-login.php.
The Wayback Machine also uses a web scraper to create the archive of websites on archive.org. The Wayback Machine therefore also has never had access to the backend of any site. And if a file is not on archive.org, then we obviously cannot recover it either.
This also means that any functionality of your website that connects to the backend, will not function correctly anymore. For example, a contact form needs to connect to the database (=backend) to save data. Maybe it also uses other backend files to send automatic emails. The result is that a contact form on a recovered website looks the same as before, but it won’t work anymore.
Some URLs end in .PHP or .ASP. This doesn’t mean that a website user can see those files. It can only see the response that was created by those files. This response is normally an HTML file – even though the URL ends with . PHP/ASP. The result is that that we cannot recover the original PHP/ASP files and their functionality. We only recover the layout/looks of those pages.
If you order our WordPress conversion, then we reverse engineer a new “backend”. We then create a new WordPress dashboard which you can access on domain.com/wp-login.php. This few dashboard doesn’t have all the theme options (to change colors and widgets etc) but it does allow you to edit the current content in a visual WYSIWYG editor.
For the WordPress conversion, we also reverse-engineer a new MySQL database. However, it’s not perfect. For example, your old contact forms will look the same, but won’t work anymore. We can fix contact forms for an additional price or you can manually do this yourself.
There are a few reasons why large websites are slow:
If you want to help the Internet Archive, then support them with a financial service, so they can invest in a faster infrastructure. They are good guys, who rely on open source techniques, which is unfortunately one of the reasons their speed is limited. We give a free recovery if you send us a screenshot of a donation upwards of $25.
If we couldn’t recreate the site as it shows on the Wayback snapshot link you provided then yes we can refund.
For an extra fee of $35 per site (on top of the Wayback scan fee) we will integrate your site with WordPress. What this means is that we will import all the existing pages into WordPress so the content is editable in the Pages or Posts section.
As well as this we will create the WordPress theme from the site’s existing design so that new pages or posts that you create will look like the rest of the site.
All the original links on the site will be kept in tact and will link to the editable WordPress pages.