As was the case with the status of the five journals that made up the special issue where "Where Do I List This on My CV?" originally appeared, the 2007 status of the four example sites I orginally discussed in the article varies.
My small example, the "Computer Teaching Tips" site, still exists in exactly the same form as it did in 2002. I don't maintain the site anymore, but I have not taken it down either. Interestingly enough, the site continues to get 100-150 hits every week.
Virginia Montecino's Education and Technology Resources site exists in the same format, and there are portions of the site that appear to have been updated as recently as 2006. Montecino retired from George Mason University in 2004.
Lee Honeycutt still maintains his hypertextualized version of Aristotle's Rhetoric. In fact, it still comes up as the top entry on Google with a search of "aristotle rhetoric." In email correspondence with me recently, Honeycutt said he considers his work on the site "pretty much done," but he still updates the bibliography portion of the site. He no longer keeps track of hits, but it is still a frequently used site. "Stanley Fish recently linked to the site from his NYTimes blog, so that was pretty cool," Honeycutt said (electronic mail communication, June 12, 2007).
Daniel Anderson's SITES Homepage and his Open Boat site are no longer active. However, in email correspondence with me recently, he told me that the Studio for Instructional Technology in English Studies is still active with internships, workshops, and support for IT projects within the English department at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. They have a new and more dynamic web site, too. Due to what he describes as "the inability of the University to keep up with Web 2.0," the SITES program has a separate domain, http://siteslab.org/, which hosts a Drupal-powered site that provides Anderson and SITES with more options than a static web site would (electronic mail communication, June 12, 2007).