The Web is Rotting. Here is How We Stitch It.
Every day, we browse past thousands of web pages. We bookmark crucial code tutorials, recipes, research reports, or purchase receipts, assuming they will always be there when we click back.
But bookmarks are fragile. They don’t save the page; they only save a
pointer to where the page once lived. Months later, you click the link only to meet a cold, lifeless
404 Not Found page. Pages are edited, domains expire, and servers go offline. This is the
phenomenon of **Link Rot**.
Even if you try to save a page using standard browser tools, you get a messy .html file
cluttered alongside a separate folder full of broken scripts and jumbled CSS files. Try copying that folder
or emailing it, and the layout falls apart instantly.
That is why developer Alindevx00x built SiteStitch. It extracts every image, stylesheet, web font, and sub-frame of a live page, serializes them, and merges them into a single, immortal HTML file. It opens anywhere on any device, fully offline. No extra folders, no broken links—just your perfect snapshot, saved forever.