Friday, 3 July 2009
Help
Hi , if there's anyone out there who knows anything about Blogging I'd love to hear from you. I've basically managed to delete 2 days work. Iwas trying to remove a photo and ended up deleting the whole post titled 'Birecik' I've tried the Help forums but although there seem to be solutions they dont work for me. Cheers.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Wish I could help. Under settings-archiving...what have you got selected? Daily? Monthly? Also, have you subscribed to you own blog on some reader? If so, those posts would be there in your reader list. You could always check that and just copy and paste it back in.
ReplyDeleteForget the comment about archiving. I assumed this was a backup method until I took 2 seconds and read about it.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.google.com/support/forum/p/blogger/thread?tid=588999c695d2fcee&hl=en
ReplyDeleteHi Bob, I've had a similar problem with blogger in the past. One of the reasons I moved over to wordpress.
ReplyDeleteGoogle something like "internet archive". There are sites that trawl the Internet and take snapshots of pages they've visited. If you're lucky, one may have passed through your site. (And it's a good reason for not publishing in the heat of the moment: some things never go away!)
ReplyDeleteWas this the missing text?
ReplyDeleteDay 7
As usual we were off early next morning, but we didnt get very far. There was an expensive sounding clatter as if we had driven over a crate as we pulled away from traffic lights near the hotel. In fact, the brakes had dropped off, discs, drums the lot.
We transferred to a mini-bus in about 20 minutes thanks largely to some impressive facilitating by our facilitator Yeltsin. He was becoming an increasingly useful bloke to have around. Our mini bus took us to a village of smiling children with their national blue and white school tunics. From the village we walked up a quite steep scree covered valley. The Kurdish form of Red tailed Wheatear were known to have bred there but despite extensive seaching could not be located. We had some compensation for our efforts with sightings of Cinereous Bunting, Upcher's warbler, Pale rock Sparrow and Bimaculated Lark. After an enjoyable lunch in a restaurant we were reunited with our coach and headed towards Birecik on the Euphrates. As we crossed the bridge over the Euphrates I saw a road sign which summed up much of what we had seen in South eastern Turkey. Rural communities living much as they have done for centuries barely touched by 'westernised' modern Turkey, except for satellite TV of course.