I think you and me might have different definitions of "easy" ;)
But, yes, I tried, and failed horribly to get an exact replica of the <hr> of the old Netscape about window[0]. Incidentally, back then I thought the introduction of <hr noshade> was the bee's knees.
Me too. Stumbling upon a webring while randomly traveling through geocities and then spending hours discovering. I would email the webmasters directly with questions and they'd answer. Oh and perl. Getting lost in perl webrings without knowing the language too well but managing to run some scripts here and there...Now days its just pull requests on github that require me to run a docker instance and install 500 packages for a hello world. Also, people used to discuss programming languages more openly. I'd spend hours reading about crack pot ideas to improve/extend BASIC. Then more hours emailing the authors of such ideas with questions. Now I can't even open an issue on github with questions about the architecture of a javascript library. Or mention how ugly Go is without getting hate email for weeks...
A lot of the spirit you mention and miss seems to be alive and well in the Clojure community. There's a lot of enthusiasm for old-fashioned hacking, improve/extend discussions, just fun times a lot of the time. I don't get that as much when interacting with, say, the JS community, or any other than I can think of. The Clojurescript community in particular is a really experimental bunch, with high energy (and many of their experiments have reached #1 here on HN in recent weeks).
It felt like everyone and their dog had a website using websites like Geocities. In Denmark we had Subnet.dk and (lesser known) Whitehat.dk.
It seems like that culture is now gone, and people have went to social networks, which is more pulling content than pushing it I guess.
On the other hand it is easier to share content today, on Facebook, Reddit or Imgur but it feels different than visiting a random website and explore the universe of that domain.
>I was impressed how everything rendered without a glitch on Chrome
Well, to be fair, this is a modern website composed of artifacts from the Geocities archive. This page would be a beast if it were implemented with techniques of the era.
Looking at the source for the page, the author seems to be lazy loading the assets and then dynamically placing them in the page with CSS.
I just had to imp my car. Did a quick google search read the first two steps and then bam I was hit with a screen taking over advertisement that took me 15-30secknds to get off of my screen. The first thing that I thought was, "damn the Internet sucks." And I was let referring to my connection.
I came up with an idea for a new webring which is some remote javascript you embed in your page and it's hosted on github and people do pull requests to add their website to a text file to join the webring
Want to start a new webring? Fork the project, alter slightly
It's a Norwegian technology/gadget retailer that was basically the Norwegian equivalent of what Radioshack used to be. Then it was sold to some entrepreneur back in 2000, promptly went bankrupt, and was bought back by the original founder. The design stems from the design of their huge paper catalogue back in the 80's.
Not two years ago I was having a conversation with an old friend that went approximately:
"Facebook, this whole internet thing, hasn't really..."
"...worked out"
"Yeah, this isn't what we thought it was gonna be. Let's just... "
"...turn it off"
There was a belief implicit in the idea of every human on Earth being connected. Many of the phenomenon that came about have made that belief look vulnerable to a certain cynicism, a cynicism about humanity, that we fear in each other, that we hold towards ourselves. A currency that bound us together face to face became fiat and then failed at scale. It is within the vacuum painted by this fear that the organizing effects of the old-world economy have been fallen back on, but I do not presently fear this cynicism, and I save my currency wherever I can earn it.
I love internet archaeology. Contemporary Home Computing[0] has some great pages. I particularly like the one analysing the so-called 'Prof. Dr. Style'[1].
I was recently trying to dig up the IDE's of the early internet publishing platforms like Geocities, Tripod, MySpace (1.0) to try and do a similar project. Could only find the archived pages/assets like this.
Can you disable the automatic playback of the music, please? Screen reader users cannot hear a thing over it all. I know you're trying to create a tribute to the web of old, but this particular throwback is not one I think deserves a place.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 135 ms ] threadBut, yes, I tried, and failed horribly to get an exact replica of the <hr> of the old Netscape about window[0]. Incidentally, back then I thought the introduction of <hr noshade> was the bee's knees.
[0]: http://i.imgur.com/WZfGllF.gif
It felt like everyone and their dog had a website using websites like Geocities. In Denmark we had Subnet.dk and (lesser known) Whitehat.dk.
It seems like that culture is now gone, and people have went to social networks, which is more pulling content than pushing it I guess.
On the other hand it is easier to share content today, on Facebook, Reddit or Imgur but it feels different than visiting a random website and explore the universe of that domain.
http://hyperallergic.com/230415/hundreds-of-geocities-images...
But I do miss it so.
I was impressed how everything rendered without a glitch on Chrome on my Mac (I do have a new Mac...).
We've come a long way. :)
Well, to be fair, this is a modern website composed of artifacts from the Geocities archive. This page would be a beast if it were implemented with techniques of the era.
Looking at the source for the page, the author seems to be lazy loading the assets and then dynamically placing them in the page with CSS.
We've definitely come a long way.
http://rainbowdivider.com
Every refresh is a new experience!
Want to start a new webring? Fork the project, alter slightly
It's a Norwegian technology/gadget retailer that was basically the Norwegian equivalent of what Radioshack used to be. Then it was sold to some entrepreneur back in 2000, promptly went bankrupt, and was bought back by the original founder. The design stems from the design of their huge paper catalogue back in the 80's.
> Catscape is the most advanced browser available.
> Version 2.324.46948633454654564646
Nice work!
"Facebook, this whole internet thing, hasn't really..."
"...worked out"
"Yeah, this isn't what we thought it was gonna be. Let's just... "
"...turn it off"
There was a belief implicit in the idea of every human on Earth being connected. Many of the phenomenon that came about have made that belief look vulnerable to a certain cynicism, a cynicism about humanity, that we fear in each other, that we hold towards ourselves. A currency that bound us together face to face became fiat and then failed at scale. It is within the vacuum painted by this fear that the organizing effects of the old-world economy have been fallen back on, but I do not presently fear this cynicism, and I save my currency wherever I can earn it.
[0]: http://contemporary-home-computing.org/ [1]: http://contemporary-home-computing.org/prof-dr-style/
Also... https://neocities.org/