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My first modem was 14,400 bps. So a whopping 1.8 KB/second on a good day :) It sure was fun in those days though. I also enjoyed hanging out in IRC, but even though it's not the same I do find Discord much better.
But can you slap someone around a bit with a large trout on Discord?
And as reminder, JavaScript was invented in 1995. Developed for Netscape 2.0.
And we've been paying the price ever since.
We could have ended up with ActiveX, VBScript.
Years of therapy to remove that memory... Wasted.
Or TCL.

How I wish it was TCL.

Debugging errors with dynamic scope would make web work much worse.
One thing to consider when reading these kinds of books is that sponsors pay to have their products listed. Yahoo was big on doing this. Excite was known to do this a lot.

> In January 1996, George Bell joined Excite as its chief executive officer (CEO). Excite also purchased two search engines (Magellan and WebCrawler) and signed exclusive distribution agreements with Netscape, Microsoft and Apple, in addition to other companies. Jim Bellows, then 72, was hired by Excite in 1994 to figure out how to present the content in a journalistic manner.[4] He paid good journalists to write brief reviews of web sites

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excite_(web_portal)

How I downloaded my first mp3:

  Went to altavista.com.
  Typed Dire_Straits_-_Sultans_of_Swing.mp3.
  Clicked the first link.
Me too forgot about that. I think it was a few years after 1996 when audiogalaxy arrived.
For me it was @ mentioning someone in an IRC chat and some bot started sending me "Sad but True" or some such angst.
FTPs with strict Up/Down quota.
That’s still possible nowadays with yandex.com (perhaps not the first link, but definitely the first page)
I had a big book called “The Internet Yellow Pages” I believe, from.. 1995? Had websites, Usenet groups, telnet MUDs and BBSs, IRC, etc. Discovery was sometimes tough in those days, so why not get a printed book?
I remember WINE being listed in that book.
Somewhere I have a copy of one of Ed Krol's early O'Reilly books, The Whole Internet User's Guide and Catalog, I think the 1993 edition that included the WWW nearly at the end of the book.

It's somehow fitting that every external link on its Wikipedia page is broken.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whole_Internet_User%27s_Guide_...