Has this situation ever happened to you? You enter search keywords in Google for a very specific topic. In the resulting screen, you see the title of that perfect article with exactly what you were seeking. Hopeful, you click the link and receive a 404-error message saying that the page does not exist. This scenario sadly happens to everyone countless times. Fortunately, there are two ways to view these once accessible pages.
Google Cache
One of the features that set Google apart from other search engines is the Google Cache. As the Googlebot indexes web pages into the central database, it also saves the HTML portion. The HTML portion is basically the text and layout without the pictures. When searching in Google, you’ve probably noticed the “Cached” link.
f you haven’t tried clicking on that link, visit it. You will be directed to the saved version of that specific web page when the Googlebot last cached it. This is the first method to try when you can’t download the actual page.
Google Cache Hacks
Some people like to “hack” the Google cache to display any page from the past. This is relatively easy to do if you look at the URL of a Google cached page. This is the URL of my website’s cache:
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:http://john.nikkitrainmaster.com
It’s pretty easy to decipher the URL. The “72.14.253.104” is just the IP address for “google.com.” The “search?” means that it is passing some commands to the search application. The “q” is the variable for query, or request. The “cache” tells the search application that it is looking for the cached version of the web page. The rest of the text after “cache” is the URL of the original page in a strange encoded format.
If we take the information from the original URL above, we can make our own customized URL for any page. Use this:
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:URL
Just replace “URL” with the URL of the page that you want to view in its cached version.