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I apologize friends, I wasn't expecting this much traffic and had just stepped out. Working on getting this back up now.

Edit: It's back up. Sorry for the inconvenience!

The blog is working fine, but the restored website isn't returning anything. Or, perhaps, the link to the restored website is broken.
What are you guys running that site on, out of curiosity?
Sorry, my $10 digital ocean vps is kinda struggling. The blog is hosted on WordPress, and being cached via memcache. But GA real time tells me about 300 people are on concurrently which its having trouble handling. I'll be periodically rebooting the box until I can access a computer.
300 concurrent connections? Sounds great. I wish my sideproject was hit with that kind of traffic :) I'd love to see what it takes to crash it :p
Restoring a 2014 website about restoring a 14-year-old website. :)
Still down. How many concurrent connections are you getting via HN right now?
Those 'Enter' landing pages + left menu frames are classics. Good times
my proudest achievement was getting 'boxless' frames working that didnt look like shit. all hand-coded
It's amazing how many of us shared the same experiences around this time. I suspect you are 31, yes? 1999 was my favourite year in high school.

My website at the time was the Armadatron, which was all things Armada (Sega Dreamcast). It was very similar in design and content, but based on the Armada universe. Players could read it to find where the best star-bases and planets were in the game, etc.

I'm pretty sure the URL was http://online-resource.com/armadatron, but the Wayback Archive redirects that URL to a parked domain. Is there any way to disable the redirect on Wayback Machine?

In a small bit of success at the time, the official Armada devs linked me from their home page :) I used Frontpage Express and notepad and after hosting a different website using my ISP and Xoom, I bought my first domain and real hosting.

That's back when you could only get domains from one company and had to pay for two years by cheque. It took forever, but it taught me many important things about running a website.

I am a web developer, today.

Thanks for the read!

I'm happy that this post and restoration have allowed so many people to visit the fond memories of their youth. In 1999 I was 13ish, so just about to enter high school. I'm also a web developer today thanks to the fumbling around I did back then!
Terrific! There's something so raw and human about these old geeky websites. Random people from all over making comprehensive, quality content about the things they love and showing it to the world how they want, through their eyes. Information is cleaner and better organized now, but less personal and less fun for sure.
Beautiful. I often try to find some of my old sites. This brings back some great memories, thanks.
LOLLLL. I so remember these days. I had several of my own. I think mine was "the best final fantasy 7 website out there!"

Some kid emailed me to call my bluff lol.

I still wish i could find mine, but i remember practically 0 about any of them :'(