A history of HCSC websites: Difference between revisions

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The first website for the [[Home Composed Song Contest]] was created by [[Martin Faulkner]] in 2000, with statistics for the early years provided by Michael Bauer.
The first website for the [[Home Composed Song Contest]] was created by [[Martin Faulkner]] in 2000, with statistics provided by Michael Bauer.


The main purpose of the site was to document the results from the early years of the competition, including sound files (in RealAudio format - this was before the mp3 had become common currency!). The contest itself would not be held online with a dedicated website until the mid-2000s.
The main purpose of the site was to document the results from the early years of the competition, including sound files in RealAudio format (this was before the mp3 had become common currency!). The contest itself would not be held online with a dedicated website until the mid-2000s.


You can see a few screenshots below (click to enlarge!). The website survived in this form until 2004, when it was comprehensively redesigned.
You can see a few screenshots below (click to enlarge). The website survived in this form until 2004, when it was comprehensively redesigned.


<center>
<center>
<gallery>
<gallery widths=200px>
File:firstwebsite2.png|The front page of the first website
File:firstwebsite1.png|The page for HCSC 2001 as it looked on the first website
File:firstwebsite1.png|The page for HCSC 2001 as it looked on the first website
File:firstwebsite2.png|The front page of the first website
</gallery>
</gallery>
</center>
</center>
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The statistics section was significantly expanded, and the emergence of the competition into the digital age (no more cassettes!) was reflected by the fact that the accompanying sound files were now available to stream and download in mp3 format.
The statistics section was significantly expanded, and the emergence of the competition into the digital age (no more cassettes!) was reflected by the fact that the accompanying sound files were now available to stream and download in mp3 format.


You can see a few screenshots of the site below (click to enlarge!).
You can see a few screenshots of the site below - click to enlarge them.


<center>
<center>
<gallery>
<gallery widths=200px>
File:secondwebsite1.png|The index page of the second website in its final update from late 2017
File:secondwebsite1.png|The index page of the second website in its final update from late 2017
File:secondwebsite2.png|The page for HCSC 2001 as it looked on the second website
File:secondwebsite2.png|The page for HCSC 2001 as it looked on the second website
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</center>
</center>


In 2018, after several years in the making, the old HTML website was finally replaced by this Wiki-style site you are reading now. As well as being more modern and familiar to users of the Eurovision Song Contest pages on Wikipedia, this makes it easier for other people to be given editing rights or even for the archive to be passed on to someone new in full - safeguarding the future of Home Composed's past!
In 2018, the old HTML website was replaced by this Wiki-style site you are reading now. As well as being more modern and familiar to users of the Eurovision Song Contest pages on Wikipedia, this makes it easier for other people to be given editing rights or even for the archive to be passed on to someone new entirely - thus safeguarding the future of the Home Composed Song Contest's past!
 
<br />{{HCSC}}

Latest revision as of 09:37, 8 December 2018

The first website for the Home Composed Song Contest was created by Martin Faulkner in 2000, with statistics provided by Michael Bauer.

The main purpose of the site was to document the results from the early years of the competition, including sound files in RealAudio format (this was before the mp3 had become common currency!). The contest itself would not be held online with a dedicated website until the mid-2000s.

You can see a few screenshots below (click to enlarge). The website survived in this form until 2004, when it was comprehensively redesigned.

The next version of the website lasted from 2004 to 2018. It featured a significantly updated and more compact design (by 2004 standards!), supplemented by graphics from Mark Henson including the now-established HCSC "house" logo.

The statistics section was significantly expanded, and the emergence of the competition into the digital age (no more cassettes!) was reflected by the fact that the accompanying sound files were now available to stream and download in mp3 format.

You can see a few screenshots of the site below - click to enlarge them.

In 2018, the old HTML website was replaced by this Wiki-style site you are reading now. As well as being more modern and familiar to users of the Eurovision Song Contest pages on Wikipedia, this makes it easier for other people to be given editing rights or even for the archive to be passed on to someone new entirely - thus safeguarding the future of the Home Composed Song Contest's past!


Home Composed Song Contest
Editions
1990s · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999
2000s · 2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009
2010s · 2010 · 2011 · 2012 · 2013 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016 · 2017 · 2018 · 2019
2020s · 2020 · 2021 · 2022 · 2023

30 Years Of HCSC: Greatest Hits

Countries
Albania · Australia · Austria · Belarus · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Cyprus · Denmark
Estonia · Finland · France · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Ireland · Israel · Italy · Latvia · Lithuania
FYR Macedonia · Malta · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia
San Marino · Serbia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · United Kingdom

Statistics
Winners · Medal table: Countries · Medal table: Participants · Most entries: Countries · Most entries: Participants