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Really enjoying the myspace music player. Kudos.
This is really cool. Would love to know more about the restoration process and if there is any way to contribute to the project as a developer
Haven't gotten to it yet, but eventually going to https://github.com/restorativland and will be open source. In the interim, the current mess of random code I'm using is here (a little out of date ATM): https://github.com/kyledrake/geocities-archive-toolshed

I've had to do a lot of starting from scratch as I find new issues and discover better ways to solve existing ones, but once I get it figured it out, it will work for other 90s sites too, and I'm hoping to release them more as general use tools than just scripts.

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Aw. It seems like they have samples of all of CapeCanaveral communities except "Launchpad" which was of course the coolest. It just returns a page not found.
I might be able to get some of this restored in a future version of the archive, if it's at the internet archive.
Every time I see a GeoCities archive, I look for my old site, which I could have sworn was at TimesSquare/9994, but it's never there. Were inactive accounts purged at some point and it got flushed away before people started mirroring GeoCities? Or is it more likely that I just don't properly remember what my page URL was?
It looks like it's there but there wasn't an index.html: https://web.archive.org/web/20010522100243/http://www.geocit...

This gallery has scrubbed any sites that didn't have an index.html, but the directory listing sites should be restored in a future version.

Ah, that makes sense.

Looks like Archive.org didn't archive any of the files, only the directory listing. Kinda worried what body.gif was. >.>

I had some colocation in Exodus 1 next to the Geocities cage.

They used thousands of SCSI Lacie consumer drives connected to Sun workstations in a cage about 10'x10'.

And a large fan blowing all that heat into their neighbor's cage.

Found some pictures of this.

While the wiring is a bit of a mess, it seemed to have been fairly well managed overall. Or at least it wasn't completely cluttered.

http://www.detritus.org/mike/gc/

This makes me so nostalgic! While there are so many great things about technology these days, I miss the Silicon Valley of those days. So many things were brand new and truly cutting edge.
I miss the old internet.
Amen. I play and watch Pokemon with my son these days, and can't help but frequently be taken back in time to the mid-late 90's when websites were raw and so many pockets of the internet didn't have a lick of even bare bones CSS. Memorials like this incapacitate me with nostalgia.
Ditto. Now the Internet is just a centralised clock work orange.
Sometimes I think downloading an mp3 on mIRC was to me what taking a picture with a Polaroid was like to my great grandfather (or whatever tech was first coming out). Downloading anything means very little to my son, but I still remember the joy I got from downloading Tears_in_Heaven-Eric_Clapton.mp3 in some room on Dalnet.
We're just scratching the surface of all we've lost from the old web.
Theres a ton of treasure from the old web. Hope more of this stuff comes online.
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Anyone know why GeoCities has these "categories" and subcategories under them and not something like geocities.com/{NUMBER} ? Was it randomly assigned or chosen by users

I used GeoCities extensively to host my sites, but I was only 9 or 10 years old, so it never occurred to me what these are for. Now I'm thinking if they were sharding hosting servers by URL routes.

You could choose. I think it was experimental and a kind of vanity URL more than anything. I put mine in "College Park" because I thought I might talk about college some, which I had just started.
When it originally launched, the "Cities" part was quite literal. To find a free "plot", you browsed a map of a town and found an empty space, and then you had 2 "neighbors" next to you. This was back when webrings[0] were still a thing and the web still had a bit more of a community feel to it.

I remember when I tried to sign up they had a beta "empty plot search" so you didn't have to spend ages looking for a plot. IIRC it didn't work for me and I went to Angelfire or something.

It quickly became really popular as a free web host (which was rare at the time) and they toned down the cities/communities aspect in favor of pure hosting.

edit: I tried to find the neighborhood map on the internet archive but it seems hidden behind imagemaps and CGI scripts that didn't make it into the archive. This is as far as I got: https://web.archive.org/web/19970703013607/http://www15.geoc... You can also see some of the community aspect here https://web.archive.org/web/19970703013533/http://www15.geoc...

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webring

So much character on each page. Yes, they were simple, but they were all unique. I miss websites with personalities.
Ahh my first website was a GeoCities page. They had a pretty awesome (for the time) HTML editing web app (CGI-BIN) and it was an amazing feeling.

Looks like my page at Tokyo/Towers isn't in the list. Looking at some of the content I think this archive is from after one of the buyouts that happened later.

So much Sailor Moon, Robotech and Dragon Ball Z... :D

Oh wow.

I was just a kid in high school when I made my first HTML site on geocities. It's so cool to see it has still lived on in archives.

Flash content still alive and well... the javascript current year broke, probably y2k ... the geocities provided page view counter is also dead :)

It's also alarming how instantly without effort I recalled my ridiculously long address on there from memory.