
I tried to fetch the McDuffie Progress event page you linked, but I couldn't reach the page: the site returned a “Too Many Requests” response (client_ip: 104.196.9.116, request_id: 9447248202). I also ran a web search for the event and didn’t find a reliable copy of the listing to cite. Because you asked me to use web.run and the uploaded files to validate the source, I don’t want to produce a 2,000+ word feature that claims to quote or summarize that specific event page until I can actually read it and cite it.
How would you like to proceed? Pick one option (or combine):
1) Retry fetch + write (recommended)
- I will attempt to re-fetch the URL and search again (I’ll keep trying until I can access the page or a cached copy). If successful I’ll produce the full feature (≥2,000 words) in rich Markdown with correct citations to the McDuffie Progress source.
- Time estimate: I can begin immediately; usually I’ll have the article within 1–2 hours after I can access the source (faster if you need a draft first).
- If you copy/paste the event description (or attach a screenshot or the event copy), I’ll write the feature using that exact text as the source and include in-text citations to it. This is the fastest reliable way.
- I can write a polished, researched feature about an event titled “Exploring Windows” (angle: community arts/heritage program, or technical/OS exploration — you choose) without directly citing the McDuffie Progress page. I will clearly state at the top that I couldn’t access the original URL and that the article is an original feature inspired by the event title rather than a direct report on that specific listing.
- If your intention was a WindowsForum.com article about Windows (the OS, features, Recall, UI, etc.) rather than the McDuffie Progress local event, tell me the angle (consumer tips, deep technical exploration, history, accessibility, security) and I’ll research and write a fully sourced piece. Because this would rely on up-to-date facts, I’ll run web.run and include citations to the authoritative sources I use.
- Do you want the article to be framed as local-event coverage (reporting on a McDuffie Progress event) or as a thematic/technical feature for WindowsForum.com about Windows (the OS) inspired by the event title?
- Any preferred angle or voice? (e.g., investigative, human-interest, how-to, technical deep dive, interview/profile)
- Deadline (when do you need the completed 2,000+ word piece)?
- If you want local event coverage: do you have any extra materials (press release, contact info for organizers, photos, schedule) you can paste or upload?
Source: The McDuffie Progress Local Events
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