Difference between revisions of "Disestablishments in 2016"

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This page is based on Wikipedia articles in '''[[:wikipedia:en:Category:2016 disestablishments|Category:2016 disestablishments]]'''. The websites for these entities could vanish in the foreseable future.
This page is based on Wikipedia articles in '''[[:wikipedia:en:Category:2016 disestablishments|Category:2016 disestablishments]]'''. The websites for these entities could vanish in the foreseable future.


* '''Statistics''': {{saved}} (29){{·}} {{notsaved}} (471){{·}} Total size (663.0 GB)
* '''Statistics''': {{saved}} (30){{·}} {{notsaved}} (470){{·}} Total size (946.7 GB)


Do not edit this page, it is automatically updated by bot. There is a [https://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title={{FULLPAGENAMEE}}/list&action=raw raw list] of URLs.
Do not edit this page, it is automatically updated by bot. There is a [https://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title={{FULLPAGENAMEE}}/list&action=raw raw list] of URLs.
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q4982823|Buck Consultants]]''' || business || <br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in New York (state)''</small> || http://www.buckconsultants.com/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.buckconsultants.com/ {{notsaved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q4982823|Buck (human resources consulting company)]]''' || business || <br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in New York (state)''</small> || http://www.buckconsultants.com/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.buckconsultants.com/ {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q5519787|GamePolitics.com]]''' || blog || GamePolitics.com was a blog which covers the politics of computer and video games. GamePolitics was launched by freelance journalist Dennis McCauley in March 2005. At the time, McCauley was the video game columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, a position he held from 1998-2009. Growing somewhat bored of writing video game reviews, McCauley created GamePolitics in order to track the political, legal and cultural impact of video games. The site was often referred to as GP by followers. || http://www.gamepolitics.com/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gamepolitics.com/ {{saved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q5519787|GamePolitics.com]]''' || blog || GamePolitics.com was a blog which covers the politics of computer and video games. GamePolitics was launched by freelance journalist Dennis McCauley in March 2005. At the time, McCauley was the video game columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, a position he held from 1998-2009. Growing somewhat bored of writing video game reviews, McCauley created GamePolitics in order to track the political, legal and cultural impact of video games. The site was often referred to as GP by followers. || http://www.gamepolitics.com/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gamepolitics.com/ {{saved}}]
| [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/domain/www.gamepolitics.com www.gamepolitics.com] || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/81i4f 81i4f] || 2014-10-18 || data-sort-value=66488443641 | {{green|61.9&nbsp;GB}}  
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| rowspan=10 | '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q677385|GameTrailers]]''' || rowspan=10 | website || rowspan=10 | GameTrailers (GT) was an American video gaming website created by Geoffrey R. Grotz and Brandon Jones in 2002. The website specialized in multimedia content, including trailers and gameplay footage of upcoming and recently released video games, as well as an array of original video content focusing on video games, including reviews, countdown shows, and other web series. || rowspan=10 | http://www.gametrailers.com || rowspan=10 | [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gametrailers.com {{saved}}]
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| rowspan=63 | '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q3759027|Gawker]]''' || rowspan=63 | blog || rowspan=63 | Gawker was an American blog founded by Nick Denton and Elizabeth Spiers and based in New York City focusing on celebrities and the media industry. The blog promoted itself as "the source for daily Manhattan media news and gossip." According to third-party web analytics provider SimilarWeb, the site had over 23 million visits per month as of 2015. Founded in 2003, Gawker was the flagship blog for Denton's Gawker Media. Gawker Media also managed other blogs such as Jezebel, io9, Deadspin and Kotaku.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in New York (state)''</small> || rowspan=63 | https://gawker.com || rowspan=63 | [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=https://gawker.com {{saved}}]
| rowspan=63 | '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q3759027|Gawker]]''' || rowspan=63 | blog || rowspan=63 | Gawker was an American blog founded by Nick Denton and Elizabeth Spiers and based in New York City focusing on celebrities and the media industry. The blog promoted itself as "the source for daily Manhattan media news and gossip." According to third-party web analytics provider SimilarWeb, the site had over 23 million visits per month as of 2015. Founded in 2003, Gawker was the flagship blog for Denton's Gawker Media. Gawker Media also managed other blogs such as Jezebel, io9, Deadspin and Kotaku.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in New York (state)''</small> || rowspan=63 | https://gawker.com || rowspan=63 | [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=https://gawker.com {{saved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q19545379|Gazzetta TV]]''' || television channel || Gazzetta TV was an Italian terrestrial television channel owned by RCS MediaGroup, specialized in sports broadcastings edited of the editorial staff of the La Gazzetta dello Sport, Italian sports newspaper.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Italy''</small> || http://www.gazzetta.tv/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gazzetta.tv/ {{notsaved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q19545379|Gazzetta TV]]''' || television channel || Gazzetta TV was an Italian terrestrial television channel owned by RCS MediaGroup, specialized in sports broadcastings edited of the editorial staff of the La Gazzetta dello Sport, Italian sports newspaper.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Italy''</small> || http://www.gazzetta.tv/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gazzetta.tv/ {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q5546575|George Wythe University]]''' || university || George Wythe University (GWU) was a non-profit classical liberal arts school in Salt Lake City, Utah which offered undergraduate and graduate degrees in the liberal arts, education and political philosophy. GWU's curriculum borrowed from the Great Books of the Western World published in 1952 by Britannica, and its methodology was based on the Socratic seminar and Oxford tutorial models. The school was named in honor of George Wythe, mentor to Thomas Jefferson. GWU was unaccredited. The college closed in August 2016, and is no longer enrolling students.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Utah''</small> || http://www.gw.edu || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.gw.edu {{notsaved}}]
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| [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/domain/www.lionhead.com www.lionhead.com] || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/byadn byadn] || 2016-03-08 || data-sort-value=1252072661 | {{green|1.2&nbsp;GB}}  
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q1130999|Locomotiv GT]]''' || band || Locomotiv GT (often abbreviated LGT, with the nickname Loksi) is a Hungarian rock band formed in 1971. It has been one of the most influential rock bands in Hungarian rock music. GT in the name of the band refers to Gran Turismo, the long journey that the band was looking forward to when it was formed. The origin of the symbol that gave the name LGT is not clear: on their first album there is a steam-powered locomotive standing in an aquarium, and locomotives have been present on many of the band’s album covers. One of the albums also has the name 424 – Mozdonyopera (‘424 – Locomotive Opera’), and when they performed their farewell concert on 17 May 1992, as a show element they arrived to the Nyugati pályaudvar (‘Budapest West railway station’) on a steam locomotive. The band was disbanded in 2016, when one of the singers, Tamás Somló died.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Hungary''</small> || http://www.lgt.hu/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.lgt.hu/ {{notsaved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q1130999|Locomotiv GT]]''' || band || Locomotiv GT (often abbreviated LGT, with the nickname Loksi) is a Hungarian rock band formed in 1971. It has been one of the most influential rock bands in Hungarian rock music. GT in the name of the band refers to Gran Turismo, the long journey that the band was looking forward to when it was formed. The origin of the symbol that gave the name LGT is not clear: on their first album there is a steam-powered locomotive standing in an aquarium, and locomotives have been present on many of the band’s album covers. One of the albums also has the name 424 – Mozdonyopera (‘424 – Locomotive Opera’), and when they performed their farewell concert on 17 May 1992, as a show element they arrived to the Nyugati pályaudvar (‘Budapest West railway station’) on a steam locomotive. The band was disbanded in 2016 after the death of the band's singer and bassist Tamás Somló.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Hungary''</small> || http://www.lgt.hu/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.lgt.hu/ {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q10927096|National Tsing Hua University Nan Da Campus]]''' || university || <br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Taiwan''</small> || http://www.nhcue.edu.tw/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.nhcue.edu.tw/ {{notsaved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q10927096|National Tsing Hua University Nan Da Campus]]''' || university || <br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Taiwan''</small> || http://www.nhcue.edu.tw/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.nhcue.edu.tw/ {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q962976|National Union for the Progress of Romania]]''' || political party || The National Union for the Progress of Romania (, UNPR) was a political party of Romania. The party was formed in March 2010 by independents who had broken away from the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and National Liberal Party (PNL) to support President Traian Băsescu. Tension began soon after the party's formation between former PSD and PNL members over the distribution of leadership positions and the political direction of the new party, with former PSD members dominating. The first party congress to elect its leaders was on 1 May 2010.<br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Romania''</small> || http://www.unpr.eu/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.unpr.eu/ {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q7758498|The Program Exchange]]''' || business || The Program Exchange was a syndicator of television programs. It was founded as Program Syndication Services Inc. in 1973 and later launched the DFS Program Exchange in 1979, which became the DFS-Dorland Program Exchange from 1986 to 1987. From 1987 to 2008, it was a division of Saatchi & Saatchi, an advertising agency (which acquired Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, the original owners), and would later be acquired by Publicis in 2000. In January 2008, Publicis transferred The Program Exchange from the Saatchi & Saatchi subsidiary to its ZenithOptimedia subsidiary, the logo was then changed to reflect this move. In early 2016, the programexchange.com website was shut down; the shutdown coincided with NBCUniversal's purchase of one of its most prominent clients, DreamWorks Classics. || http://www.programexchange.com || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.programexchange.com {{notsaved}}]
| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q7758498|The Program Exchange]]''' || business || The Program Exchange was a syndicator of television programs. It was founded as Program Syndication Services Inc. in 1973 and later launched the DFS Program Exchange in 1979, which became the DFS-Dorland Program Exchange from 1986 to 1987. From 1987 to 2008, it was a division of Saatchi & Saatchi, an advertising agency (which acquired Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, the original owners), and would later be acquired by Publicis in 2000. In January 2008, Publicis transferred The Program Exchange from the Saatchi & Saatchi subsidiary to its ZenithOptimedia subsidiary, the logo was then changed to reflect this move. In early 2016, the programexchange.com website was shut down; the shutdown coincided with NBCUniversal's purchase of one of its most prominent clients, DreamWorks Classics. || http://www.programexchange.com || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://www.programexchange.com {{notsaved}}]
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| '''[[:wikipedia:d:Q7759802|The Record-Courier (Baker City)]]''' || newspaper || <br/><small>''2016 disestablishments in Oregon''</small> || http://therconline.com/ || [https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/?q=http://therconline.com/ {{notsaved}}]
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Revision as of 23:23, 27 January 2019

This page is based on Wikipedia articles in Category:2016 disestablishments. The websites for these entities could vanish in the foreseable future.

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