Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It is a ghost site lacking even ghosts.
Today he adds 60 to 100 sites a month, about half of them sent by Ghost Sites fans.
Some of the ghost sites are victims of dot-com companies that promised a wide menu of services, often at no cost, and have since gone bust.
Up Nights (at Ghost Sites)
Or even worse, you're going to be a ghost site like MSN Auctions with virtually no chance of ever overcoming ebay.
Several others include Balmoral Mounds, Ghost Site Mounds, and Sundown Mounds.
It is revealed that Feardotcom is, in fact, a ghost site made by one of Pratt's first victims, who is seeking revenge because people watched her being tortured and murdered.
Although Digital Convergence and the CueCat system are generally assumed to be defunct, the Digital Convergence website remained as a ghost site through 2004.
GHOST SITE - Speaking of The Industry Standard: The magazine may be dead, but thestandard.com, its Web site, lives on.
Once one of the country's largest rayon plants, Avtex is now something of a ghost site, its machinery silent, the liquid rayon left in pipes and tanks slowly hardening.
This is the story of old La Sal, the ghost site of a once vigorous cow town, now stripped of its houses, stores, barns, corrals--and even its name.
For a humorous look at pages that once burned brightly and then flickered out, visit Ghost Sites (www.disobey.com/ghostsites), an active page that chronicles inactive ones and is updated monthly.
Although he sells mousepads and T-shirts, he said, he makes no money from Ghost Sites; he runs one site ad in return for free space from the site's Webmaster.
According to Steve Baldwin of disobey.com's Ghost Sites, it received recognition for its "pioneering use of borderless frames" and "topical, eclectic editorial content", and "was an important forerunner of the 'Blog.'"
An amateur historian, Mr. Baldwin got the idea for the museum, also known as Ghost Sites, while noticing pages going dark on Pathfinder and other giant portals during the Internet's first big content shakeout, near the end of 1996.