About
How Kingsley 2.0 works
Kingsley 2.0 is a preservation archive. The original kingsley2.com (2003-2012) documented the early Web 2.0 era from inside Salesforce, WordPress and social-media monitoring. When the domain lapsed, the posts kept being cited by Matt Mullenweg, John Resig, Mark Cuban and the WordCamp SF 2007 attendee list. We rebuilt the site so those citations resolve to readable pages instead of PBN listicles.
Mission
Preserve the historical archive, make it readable on modern browsers, and pair it with retrospectives that explain why those posts mattered. The goal is to keep the web of citations intact, not to imitate or replace the original author.
Editorial method
- Each archive post is taken from one verified Wayback Machine snapshot before 2013.
- Original URLs, snapshot URLs and publication dates are stored in post metadata and exposed in JSON-LD.
- Restoration edits are limited to: removing the Wayback toolbar HTML, fixing broken images where a sibling snapshot exists, and adding a header note that distinguishes archived material from editorial annotation.
- Modern retrospectives are clearly labeled as such and never edit archived material.
- No tracking is added to archived pages other than first-party analytics.
- The em-dash and en-dash typographic marks are not used in published material.
Author transparency
All bylines in Kingsley 2.0 are pen-names attached to the small editorial collective. The original author of the 2003-2012 archive is named only in the citation field of each archive post and in this paragraph; we do not claim that identity.
Contact
Editorial: editorial@kingsley2.com. Hosting provider: Cloudflare, Inc.. Site rebuild date: 2026-05-14.
Editorial team
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K2 Editorial Team
tech archive / web history / preservation / open source
The Kingsley 2.0 editorial collective curates the original kingsley2.com archive (2003-2012) and writes modern retrospectives on early Web 2.0, Salesforce, blogging tools, and open-source culture.
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Theo Marchetti
salesforce / wordpress / saas history / developer tools
Tech retrospectives editor and ex-SaaS product manager. Writes about how the 2003-2012 web shaped current developer tooling, with a focus on Salesforce ecosystem and WordPress.
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Sara Kowalski
social media / monitoring / jquery / mobile web
Reviews indie developer tools and tracks the evolution of social media monitoring from 2005 Firehose-era tools to modern observability stacks.