В ближайшие дни Архивач временно работает без основного хранилища ранее сохранённых картинок/видео пока мы проводим работы по техническому обслуживанию. Сохранение всего вновь поступающего контента продолжается. Но затем всё обязательно вернётся в полном объёме!
http://jeffsachs.org/2012/03/what-i-did-in-russia/
The lack of Western assistance was grim and was my greatest frustration[32] during late 1991 and 1992. The early days were inauspicious to say the least. When the G-7 deputies came to Moscow in late November 1991, just a few days after Gaidar had come to power as head of Yeltsin’s economic team, the main focus of the G-7 message was the urgency that the Soviet Union should continue to service the external debts at any cost. There was no discussion of the upcoming economic reforms, and no realism among the G-7 deputies about the extreme desperation of the economic scene. Gaidar was warned by the assembled powers that day that any suspension of debt payments would result in the immediate suspension of urgent food aid, and that ships nearly arrived at the Black Sea ports would turn around. Russia in fact continued to service the debts for a few more weeks before completely running out of cash by February 1992.