Ask HN: What was the Internet like before corporations got their hands on it?

What was the Internet like in its purest form? Was it mainly information sharing, and if so, how reliable was the information?

268 points | by varrock 1901 days ago

125 comments

  • justanother 1901 days ago
    1990. Not very many people had even heard of it. Some of us who'd gotten tired of wardialing and Telenet/Tymnet might have had friends in local universities who clued us in with our first hacked accounts, usually accessed by first dialing into university DECServers or X.25 networks. Overseas links from NSFNet could be as slow as 128kbit and you were encouraged to curtail your anonymous FTP use accordingly. Yes you could chat and play MUDs, but you could also hack so many different things. And admins were often relatively cool as long as you didn't use their machines as staging points to hack more things. If you got your hands on an outdial modem or x.25 gateway, you were sitting pretty sweet (until someone examined the bill and kicked you out). It really helped to be conversant in not just Unix, but also VMS, IBM VM/CMS, and maybe even Primenet. When Phrack came out, you immediately read it and removed it from your mail spool, not just because it was enormous, but because admins would see it and label you a troublemaker.

    We knew what the future was, but it was largely a secret. We learned Unix from library books and honed skills on hacked accounts, without any ethical issue because we honestly felt we were preparing ourselves and others for a future where this kind of thing should be available to everyone.

    We just didn't foresee it being wirelessly available at McDonalds, for free. That part still surprises me.

    • ianai 1901 days ago
      Good point on free wireless being surprising. Actually, the relative cruddiness of google searches surprises me. I remember the days of searching 3+ search engines and cross compiling bookmark lists. It took a while. Sometimes you would find very nicely combined information and links in a website and learn a lot. Now it’s more like every search has been spammed with SEO’d posts in search of traffic and ad revenue. If your search is too unique or just too nuanced from an SEO’d search your search will be effectively worthless. Google might even be incentivized to mute your search.

      Product life cycles seem to be more fickle. You used to be able to find a year or two older model for cheaper. Now, new models effectively replace old models. Actually, online stores feel very concentrated.

    • walshemj 1901 days ago
      That's the first mention I have seen on HN of primenet :-)

      I used to work for the UK tymnet system (80:BTG174) and Logging on from home via a 110 baud text portable terminal to kick off a map reduce billing run on all the Telecom Gold (tymnet) 15 or 16 Primes was interesting.

    • gonzo 1900 days ago
      > We just didn’t foresee it being wirelessly available at McDonalds, for free.

      Sorry about that.

    • ngcc_hk 1900 days ago
      Still remember need to send in an expert to explain what is internet.

      Then we use it the admin people look at the charge so low and ask why this international fax is so cheap. In any case they said please ask your supervisor to authorise each connection in writing by filling form no xyZ! Have to explain and fight a bit. The case is really settled down only because it is so cheap. Not because they understand it. Or us.

    • fatnoah 1899 days ago
      I remember servers being relatively open, i.e. "we just got some new Alphas, we'll give you an account to check it out".
    • mehrdadn 1901 days ago
      What do you see as the future ~20 years from now?
      • justanother 1901 days ago
        A few years back, I once mused to friends: What happened to the hackers and revolutionaries, the teenage determination to liberate technology at all cost, writing cool text-philes along the way? A friend's answer has stuck with me ever since: "I think that says more about you than the disappearing hackers." I knew he was right: My attitude has a lot to do with how I handle the present and future. Indeed, at the smallest conferences (small-town B-Sides, 2600 meetings, even Apple II KansasFest and so forth, definitely not Defcon), I can still catch a glimpse of that gritty excitement to which I was literally addicted, night and day. To stay up all night discovering, hacking, and plotting to use the new knowledge to build a more democratic knowledge-centered world.

        I mention this because so far, the future seems to involve more DRM and paywalls, less neutrality, more megabytes of poorly-written crappy Javascript. And if you let that line of thinking get to you, you just feel like tossing your iPad in the trash and going hiking. At least then, you don't have to read all those dumb Alex Jones forwards from your crazy aunt.

        But it doesn't have to be that way. The re-decentralization movement is slowly gaining mindshare. What happens in 2040 depends 100% on how we act now. The great utopian sharing mindspace that we wrote about endlessly in Mondo 2000 (or Computer Lib / Machine Dreams) can still happen if we want.

        • bane 1900 days ago
          When I think of what I wanted the internet to become, HN, Wikipedia, github and Archive.org spring very heavily to mind.

          I think it's easy to lose site of the fact that the "old" internet is still there, there's just so many new layers of people and layers of things on top of it that it's hard to remember that you can still setup a /~bane/ website pretty trivially...lots of other services could still exist but nobody wants to foot the bill.

          I think one of the best representations of the old internet is how the demoscene operates. Free, volunteer, information rich, a bit quirky and communal.

      • yellowbuilding 1900 days ago
        Extreme distaste and aversion of the public internet.

        Decentralization can only happen by meeting some prerequisites that we as a society are not even comfortable talking about.

        I don’t want this and insist it’s not coming from defeatism. I say it because I desperately want to change it. I just have yet to be presented with a way out that makes a lick of sense.

        I come from the advertising industry. The mindless assertion that private industry can be trusted in moral pursuit is breaking our society, and the modern web browser has accelerated that.

        Decentralization is not a path. It’s a goal. There are two general paths:

        One is through public regulation of the corporations that broke the internet in the first place and approach something resembling economic justice, making room in the public consciousness for decentralization to proliferate.

        The other path, a shorter path, is to consider the internet as a public plaza. Equal access, free speech, defended by democracy instead of by capitalists. The public provides an ethical base set of internet services and regulates hiring and privacy practices in such a way that citizens can use these to pursue their livelihoods. Decentralization can proliferate from these spaces of unmitigated discussion, which are not reliant on the ruthless advertising economy.

        These are each still well outside the realm of the public’s imagination, because people simply have no clue about the advertising regime that governs their lives.

  • csours 1901 days ago
    An indirect answer, by way of analogy:

    I chose my house because of the walking trail behind it. One of my neighbors really loves the walking trail too, but he hates the fact that the city took it over and made it a public park. He hates the fact that it is improved and there is parking because now other people use it too (See also Eternal September).

    My neighbor also hates the stores that came in on the edge of the park and cleared the brush between the park and the roads. Plenty of people drive on those roads, and visit those stores and never know that the park is there.

    I feel like the internet is very similar: The old part is still there, but most people use the stores, roads, and gathering places next to it instead of visiting it.

    • comboy 1901 days ago
      I would add that you could meet people on this walking trail who enjoy peace and nature and who aren't there anymore. Or if they are, they are mixed with others so you can't just say hi and have a moment together just based on the fact that you both know this trail.

      People used to have personal pages, not just blogs, often trying to share their knowledge and notes on different topics. I miss that. Plus casual IRC.

      • WalterBright 1901 days ago
        I still have my personal page:

        https://www.walterbright.com

        It hasn't changed much for 20 years :-)

      • greenyoda 1901 days ago
        Some people still have personal pages. Here are some that I've run into while reading HN:

        https://www.gwern.net

        https://bellard.org

        • njarboe 1901 days ago
          A search engine for only pages catered by an individual and not a company would be very cool. The first PageRank patent recently expired[1], so one could use the early Google methods for setting up such a thing. I thought early google was great and much better than today's.
          • philipkglass 1900 days ago
            I thought early google was great and much better than today's.

            In terms of treating bacterial infections, the early years of penicillin were also better than our own era because the pathogens hadn't evolved resistance yet. Early Google was great because the Web's pathogens hadn't evolved resistance yet.

            • njarboe 1900 days ago
              Maybe one would have to have a system where the websites were vetted by people, set up trees of trust, and then let people choose the top of the tree and the depth for the search. Probably too computationally intense, if one has many nodes and websites, but it would be interesting to try.
          • toyg 1901 days ago
            Say hello to Stephanie Kowalski, spammer-generated bot with a homepage entirely dedicated to the joys of essential oils.
            • njarboe 1900 days ago
              I wonder if it was a paid search portal owned by someone that did not feel the need to maximize profits could do a much better job? Like Craigslist worked well for a long time.
              • toyg 1900 days ago
                That exists already, it’s called Facebook.
            • ghettoimp 1900 days ago
              Yes. This is exactly what would happen. It is sad.
              • tastroder 1900 days ago
                I occasionally feel like that already happened.

                Looking at quite a few modern social networks, like Instagram, "success" and engagement on many of these platforms seems to follow many of the same rules people use for SEO in regular websites. From an outside perspective much of the difference between many influencer or aggregation accounts and a bot with nice imagery escapes me. (Although I realize much of that is just me being old and grumpy and the difference is likely the community around those figures that I am simply not a part of)

              • asdff 1900 days ago
                Automatic aggregation can always be manipulated by advertising, no matter how its served up. Filtering is essential.
            • acct1771 1900 days ago
              Blogspot, and then Blogger, were bastions of spam.

              What's it matter?

          • pard68 1901 days ago
            Or early Yahoo, when it was a human curated list of websites.
      • andrejc 1899 days ago
        Reminded me of a blog post from 2000, written by a disheartened techie during dot-com era. Here is what she wrote about the "dot-com" people: "They don't have personal sites. They don't want personal sites. They don't get personal sites. They don't get personal."

        Here is the full post:

        https://megnut.com/2000/04/14/ive-been-thinking-a-lot/

    • liotier 1901 days ago
      There is a mountain in the alps where I used to hike in the winter, cross-country with ski skins - a day outing with excellent fresh snow. Few people had the skills or equipment to get there - it felt exclusive, we had fun and the people we met there sometimes and exchanged a few words with were always excellent people just like us. On summiting we used to add a stone to the cairn.

      Now there is a ski resort, with cable car going to the summit. Every day thousands of people of all stripes enjoy the wonderful view, have fun in the good and well groomed snow on the marked pistes - with the convenience of a heated shop for snacks & souvenirs...

      Cue Dire Strait's Telegraph Road...

      • ip26 1901 days ago
        In the Alps?

        I had thought the cable cars have all been there for a lifetime by now, and of course it seems like every great mountain has some ancient town or another at it's base. Where in the Alps was this?

        • liotier 1900 days ago
          Edge of La Vanoise, near Les Trois Vallées, mid-eighties.
      • pesmhey 1901 days ago
        >it felt exclusive

        You can definitely recreate the feeling of exclusivity today on the internet.

        • ndnxhs 1901 days ago
          Lots of invite only websites around that have really great communities. Getting in can be a bit hard but once you are in they tend to cross invite to other invite only sites.
          • blfr 1900 days ago
            I am on a couple trackers and forums like that. They're usually pretty slow and those that were once open slow down when they become invite only.
            • ndnxhs 1900 days ago
              Slow is fine for me. The ones I look at tend to have a slow but quality stream of posts. Encourages you to check just once a day and leave a few well thought out comments. The slowness also means your comments get read by more people before they get drowned out by the firehouse of memes and insults.

              When I post something on tildes.net I see there are a lot of upvotes that come in over a few days so I know people are reading but when I post something on twitter I don't think anyone ever reads that unless they log in at the second I post it.

          • atmosx 1901 days ago
            Can you name four?
            • ndnxhs 1900 days ago
              lobster.rs - invite only tech site. More focused in tech than hacker news and less business/troll comments.

              tildes.net - similar to reddit but with a heavy focus on no memes/fluff posts

              RED - great music and general forum with next to no bait/troll posts.

              There are lots more but those are the ones I personally enjoy.

              • marttt 1899 days ago
                There is also Wilby, a search engine for "oldschool", static, single-person-curated sites like these: https://wiby.me/

                From Wilby's about page:

                "Search engines like Google are indispensable, able to find answers to all of your technical questions; but along the way, the fun of web surfing was lost. In the early days of the web, pages were made primarily by hobbyists, academics, and computer savvy people about subjects they were interested in. Later on, the web became saturated with commercial pages that overcrowded everything else. All the personalized websites are hidden among a pile of commercial pages. Google isn't great at finding those gems, its focus is on finding answers to technical questions, and it works well; but finding things you didn't know you wanted to know, which was the real joy of web surfing, no longer happens. In addition, many pages today are created using bloated scripts that add slick cosmetic features in order to mask the lack of content available on them. Those pages contribute to the blandness of today's web.

                The Wiby search engine is building a web of pages as it was in the earlier days of the internet. In addition, Wiby helps vintage computers to continue browsing the web, as page results are more suitable for their performance."

                EDIT: See also this reddit thread for additional references: https://www.reddit.com/r/TTTThis/comments/72ukag/rememberweb...

                (with e.g. sheldonbrown.com being my object of fascination in circa 2005 -- a remarkable encyclopedia for bicycle maintainers).

              • random_kris 1900 days ago
                can you gimme invite code for tildes.net ? sounds interesting
          • acutesoftware 1901 days ago
            Do you have any good examples?
            • ndnxhs 1900 days ago
              Check the comment I left on the sibling comment.
    • TomMckenny 1901 days ago
      It's a good analogy but...

      The corporate web is an "improvement" on the decentralized web only in the way ice-cream is an improvement on vegetables.

      • csours 1901 days ago
        Oh, indeed, and a lot of people hate improved trails as well.
        • TomMckenny 1901 days ago
          Hiking trails don't monetize your every click.

          A better analogy is Henry Ford's hyper tidy and closely monitored neighborhoods built for his workers. Some didn't like it.

    • KingMachiavelli 1901 days ago
      I think this is a useful analogy since while the old part is still here it is extremely vulnerable to the passing ill informed laws and sadly most people won't notice when it is gone.
    • agumonkey 1900 days ago
      it's a very common feeling; something pure when small evaporates when public. At least it didn't become a new layer for life like internet is.. it's a weird money making machine now.. it spoils almost everything.

      And to an extent, I wish the world was not trying to give everything to everyone. I think it's more beautiful for things to be small and wild and only those who really connect to it live there.

  • tokyodude 1900 days ago
    This will probably come across as Get Of My Lawn type of comment.

    What I remember most about internet pre Facebook in particular and maybe Pre-smart phones. It was mostly a place for geeks. Geeks wrote blogs or had personal websites. Non geek stuff was more limited. It felt like a place where the geeks that were semi socially outcast kind of ran the place.

    Today the internet feels like the real world where the popular people in the real world are the most popular people online. Where all the things that I felt like I escaped from on the net before I can no longer avoid.

    I'm not saying that's bad. I think it's awesome that my non tech friends and family can connect and or share their lives and thoughts easily where as before there was a barrier to entry. I'm only pointing out that, at least for me, it changed. It was a place I liked or felt connected to or something, maybe like I was "in the know" or I can't put my finger on it. To now where I have no such feelings.

    Maybe it's the same feeling as liking something before it's popular and it loses that feeling of specialness once everyone else is into it. (which is probably a bad feeling to begin with)

    • philpem 1900 days ago
      This is how I feel about it too. It's almost like the Eternal September just kept getting worse.

      I remember in my early days online, I was learning electronics design as a hobby. I posted a rather silly question to sci.electronics (silly in the sense that even a first-year student would have known the answer). A couple of hours later, a professor at an Ivy League university and a professional electronics designer had not only answered the question, but suggested some things I should learn and brush up on, and some books to do it. All very polite.

      These days, it feels like the only answer you're likely to get is "lol git gud". The questions I come across sound almost like "I'm paying my ISP, I deserve an answer". The politeness and respect seems to have been lost over time.

      That's not saying it's gone from everywhere -- StackExchange seems to get the balance right, with people willing to help newcomers to get involved. It's just that nice places like that are becoming fewer and further between, and I think that's sad.

      • ianai 1900 days ago
        It was also possible to run your own services much easier. If you wanted a domain name it or something close to it were unlikely to be squatted. I was able to setup and run a mail server in a colocation as a high school student. Not to mention I easily got email names or account names that didn’t suck - Ie not artificially long or number inclusive. At several points I had email accounts like jobs@domain.com. Most everything has been thought of or just squatted by someone looking to make a big buck.

        There was also optimism. The internet seemed impenetrable to the concentrating effects of society - but now we’ve got about 5 companies that run anything you’re looking to do online or with a computer. Even things like movies or shows are dominated with dystopian plots. They’ve even killed Star Trek, a hallmark of scifi eutopias.

      • zeruch 1899 days ago
        The eternal September reference is an accurate one.
  • neltnerb 1901 days ago
    Individuals hosting servers with whatever functionality they wanted that people would connect to, substantially spread by word of mouth (like MUDs and IRC channels) but otherwise difficult to search. People would link to others they found interesting in "rings" to help visitors find new people to read, and often online communities were made up of a lot of people who knew each other in person and wanted a way to communicate from home more easily.

    Information you found was generally published or organized by a passionate individual, for instance if you wanted to know about Star Trek you could find a star trek website that had factoids assembled manually by a few people. So you can imagine that the information was probably pretty reliable, delivered without commercial intent, but the breadth of availability was limited to what individual people felt like publishing.

    In the beginning, I remember borrowing books on the internet from the local public library which had a CDROM that had basic software like mosaic to browse the web, and many would provide IP addresses and port numbers for public FTP servers containing things like freeware games and open source software. I was about 11, I'm not sure how adults at the time got online but it's probably not that far different.

    Basically, imagine the entire content of the internet being like open source -- if someone was passionate about something and wanted to share it it was there. If not, it wasn't. Servers were often located in people's homes, I remember many times services just not responding because the hosts home internet was down.

    • lucb1e 1901 days ago
      > Individuals hosting servers with whatever functionality they wanted that people would connect to, substantially spread by word of mouth ... Information you found was generally published or organized by a passionate individual ... delivered without commercial intent ... if someone was passionate about something and wanted to share it it was there. ... Servers were often located in people's homes

      Woa, I'm not old enough to have experienced that period of the internet, but this perfectly describes what I do. My servers are at home, I have lots of little tools in a folder that I'm happy for people to use ('connect to'), I used to run a lot more services but with my email hosted on it that is quite a security risk (maybe I'll start doing it again on the new system that I'm setting up, which is much more compartmentalized), my websites do not have ads and only one has visitor counting (using StatCounter, installed when I was 16 and curious how people used my first site). In the early days, I collected facts, links, and flash games about BMXing because I thought that sport was epic. I also shamelessly hacked those games' online highscores, if they had one, and that's how I ended up where I am today (security consultant) :-)

    • hvs 1900 days ago
      I had forgotten about webrings. The web of the mid-90s was truly a "web". The search engines were basically garbage, so you never knew what you were going to find. It was weird and interesting and there was a lot of random interesting stuff on it (mostly if you were a nerd, which we all were because normal people didn't use it yet).
    • bayofpigs 1901 days ago
      This really captures many of the differences. I'll just add that though we have more content creators today the motivation is what's really changed so much.

      Back then it was harder to share your own content, either by learning HTML or hosting your own server and no real monetary rewards for doing so, and no social status indicators except for maybe 'hit counters'. Because of this it was passion for the topic that motivated people to share with far less focus on how it looked or the way it was presented.

      Now with advertising, upvoting and platform biases people are more judgemental while reading others work. The motivation to create traffic and increase social outreach changed the nature of sharing itself.

  • jslabovitz 1901 days ago
    ARPAnet, 1982: Late nights on a Heathkit H89 running CP/M, 24x80 green screen... dialing up at 300 baud to a terminal server, probably across the Potomac at the Pentagon, typing magic numbers (pre-TCP/IP) to connect over NCP to unseen computers at MIT. Stallman and others were happy to give out guest accounts to random teenagers like me, so I spent hours futzing around systems like the bizarre MIT-ITS (Incompatible Time-sharing System) or the only slightly less bizarre V6 Unix at mit-ccc. Discovered Usenet news and mailing lists and FTP archives and dove in headfirst. There was a feeling of rough travel then, with no paved roads, no centralized maps, few guidelines, but many kind strangers along the way. It wasn't all tech or sci-fi geekery -- I was parts of mailing lists as diverse as alternative music (Love-Hounds) and body piercing.

    Proto-WWW, 1993: Happened across O'Reilly & Associates at a network conference, and joined up with their Global Network Navigator project, the first commercial web publication (my first gig there was the first ad). Even so, every last one of us at GNN was passionate and excited about this medium exploding before our eyes. Everything was new, untried. There was no breaking things because so little was formed. There was a fluidity of expression (even within its constraints), a vast potential that was almost tangible, a sense that the web itself was a creative material to be molded. In this short time between the web's inception (~1993) and platforms like Geocities (~1995), we played in the raw muck of the primal web: HTTP + HTML + GIF + you.

    • JohnJamesRambo 1901 days ago
      What do you think of how it has turned out so far?
      • jslabovitz 1900 days ago
        Meh. Not great. (But thanks for asking.)

        Sure, there's definite improvements. More people have access, more of the time, and that's brought in interesting & creative people and projects. (As well as the obvious opposite.) It's easier to publish graphics, sound, video -- anything beyond text was difficult before. For a while, discovery was much improved, although I actually think that's gotten worse lately.

        What gets to me the most, though, are three things:

        1. The loss of interoperability. When the internet started, there was a clear, strong value placed on interconnection. First it was through low-level protocols like NCP or TCP/IP, then through application protocols like FTP, SMTP/POP/IMAP, Gopher, HTTP. This effort seemed to peak with network APIs (RESTful or not) and other standards like RSS/Atom. The protocols changed, but the idea remained: we, the users, should be able to build our own view of the internet, each according to our needs. This whole trajectory seems to have been greatly devalued in modern times. I understand that it's due to economics -- advertising wins over community -- but it's depressing as hell.

        2. Centralization of services. We talk about this a lot on Hacker News; I don't need to elaborate. But take it from an old net.geezer that it feels extremely uncomfortable that most people only use a literal handful of sites -- and more and more people seem to question the idea of independent websites at all.

        3. General complexity. I've retired from the tech world, in part, because of the overwhelming complexity of the technology. Maybe this is like the old days of science, where after a point, one person could not comprehend the field. But still, it saddens me that there seems less and less space for simplicity. I run all-static sites (with no Javascript and minimal CSS), not much different than I did in the mid-1990s -- and for that I'm a radical. I find that strange.

        • JohnJamesRambo 1900 days ago
          Thank you for your great answer.

          I read an HN poster the other day saying they ONLY use news aggregator sites because they are afraid of venturing on the web now. A little part of me died inside because the hidden corners of the web where you learn something new are the best virtue of the internet to me.

  • rocky1138 1901 days ago
    One thing that hasn't been mentioned in this thread is chat rooms. It was quite common to enter a chat room with complete strangers and become actual friends with them. The Internet was truly the first "safe space" where no one felt they needed to hide the real part of themselves or self-censor. You might never learn their real name, but you learned the person behind the handle.

    I've written about this before: https://johnrockefeller.net/you-know-what-i-miss-the-unlimit...

    There were quite a few instances where people from chat rooms on Yahoo and otherwise became real friends separated by distance only, talking on the telephone nightly.

    • watwut 1901 days ago
      That does not ring true for me. I was always self-censoring and hiding parts of myself on internet, including or especially in chats.

      I mean seriously, we are talking about time when people were hiding "rm -rf" into newbie advice and such or would try to hack you if they did not liked you.

    • systematical 1901 days ago
      "real part of themselves" except for their name, anonymity was easier when I first started using the internet circa 1995. Doxing wasn't a thing.
      • Starwatcher2001 1901 days ago
        I agree with that. There were a number of anonymous remailers [0] where you could send emails to others, or make posts to Usenet[1]. The remainers would strip all the headers from your post and replace them with a specific number. Other users could then reply to you using that number without knowing your real email address or name. Likewise, you wouldn't know theirs. Coupled with PGP, anonymity was very high.

        I spent many months making good friendships with people like that before being comfortable with coming out as trans.

        It was good not being tracked and traced.

        [0] The most famous being anon.penet.fi. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penet_remailer

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet

        • systematical 1900 days ago
          Yep, takes a lot more effort these days. Effort I am just not willing to put forth. The most I do is periodically Google my name and remove old information I no longer want out there.
    • nuna 1900 days ago
      I was maybe 9 or younger in the early 90s and I was very computer savvy (am in software now, surprise?) I knew how to log into chat rooms. My parents had no idea and it wasn't as dangerous as it was now. It was just a lot of people really excited to talk to each other. I may have been lucky.
      • refuzedrox 1900 days ago
        a/s/l?
        • raihansaputra 1894 days ago
          oh man. I've neer been into irc, but this reminds me of msn and chat days. You know, IMs with online status and not. I hate to be always present in the current ecosystem.
        • nuna 1900 days ago
          yup haha
    • tokyodude 1900 days ago
      Can you explain a different between that and the millions of slack/discord etc "chat rooms" of today through which I've met people in real life?
      • rocky1138 1900 days ago
        The difference is the mentality of the people going into them. It was a different time; you'd join one looking for friends and the novelty of the experience meant that everyone at the same level, exploring this new place together.
      • buboard 1900 days ago
        discord comes close. however it doesn't have that "dangerous" feeling where nothing stops you from exploring dark corners.
    • kalleboo 1900 days ago
      I ended up becoming roommates with three pals I met on IRC. This was in the mid-/late- 00's
    • joejerryronnie 1901 days ago
      My cousin met her future husband in a Los Angeles Lakers chat room and are happily married to this day.
      • iamdave 1901 days ago
        It's nice of her to look at the individual and be able to see past his awful disability of being a Lakers fan :P

        Getting back on topic, this brings up a weird thing to me: While not raised with the internet, it has been around for a good portion of my life, chat rooms and message boards, channels and newsgroups were my daily fodder. I've met numerous friends I've gamed with in person, had meetups with others, and traveled with some.

        But having tried it across a few sites, and even tried some of the paid experiences, online dating-even as a guy-absolutely REPULSES me.

        Being in the generation that birthed it, you'd think the exact opposite. It's a weird phenomenon to me.

  • Apreche 1901 days ago
    Look at all the parts of the Internet today that don't make any money. Now imagine that is the only part there is. Lots of IRC chats, BBSes, newsgroups, email, MUDs, FTP, fan sites, and sharing of software. Lots and lots of text. What few images, and later video/audio, there were was very low quality. Try the wayback machine and you can at least see the old web even though it would be harder to see the other old parts.
    • u801e 1901 days ago
      You can see at least some of the old parts of usenet via Google Groups.
      • dwd 1901 days ago
        Usenet was awesome back in '89-92.

        Best place to find interesting new music and bands. Also miss some of the funny quirky spots like alt.religion.kibology

        • u801e 1898 days ago
          I didn't get on usenet until 1998 (didn't have internet access before 1995), but I found it quite informative for the topics I was interested in. Unfortunately, the groups frequented died out around 2013 when pretty much all the regulars stopped posting.
      • asjo 1901 days ago
        Or you can follow usenet 30 years delayed on https://olduse.net/ (also available via nntp).
  • raydev 1901 days ago
    I first "logged on" as a teenager in the late 90s. My access was exclusively at my friend's house, whose dad needed a separate phone line for work-related internet tasks.

    I would say nothing has changed and everything has changed. Community-wise, you could find a niche and talk about hobbies and interests (Compuserve chat rooms!) and all that, but all the world's information wasn't indexed yet, so anyone speaking authoritatively would be infallible since no was able to prove them wrong or right unless they cracked open an Encyclopedia Britannica. Or maybe had a CD-ROM and Encarta.

    Now, literally everyone is "online" in some form. Instead of turning to one of the 3 or 5 trusted news sources that report across their home country, they are now just gathering their info from other users like themselves.

    If anything the "corporations" have put us more in touch with each other, and people tend to trust an individual more than a corporation, which leads to individuals and corporations attempting to game the system.

    ----

    I gotta say, I like it all better now. I do miss how quaint it all used to feel. The concept of using the internet was special in itself.

    But it was super hard to find communities that weren't centered around sci-fi or people trying to cyber or people who were obsessed with "computing" in general. I'm a programmer now but my heart has always been in the arts and music, and those art-nerd types didn't start "logging on" until the late 00s imo. Perhaps that's partially due to bandwidth constraints.

    • walshemj 1901 days ago
      Not Always Ivan Pope (who was in the same class as some of the BYA) was involved in setting up Cyberia and some of the early zines.
    • varrock 1900 days ago
      If you don't mind me asking, as someone who appreciates the arts and music, what kind of programming do you do?
  • skilled 1901 days ago
    Fun!

    First and foremost, a lot of IRC. Also, a lot of Counter-Strike & HLTV. RFI (Remote File Injection -- r57 / c99 anyone? :P) and SQL exploitation in the wild. Enjoying being a part of actual forum communities with proper moderators and clearly defined subject matters. DDoS'ing other IRC networks that were talking shit. Manipulating Google search results for AdSense revenue and otherwise -- I jumped on this too late, unfortunately. Going to Russian hacker forums to read up on the latest exploits. Learning Perl and Visual Basic to build shitty programs and scripts.

    Indeed, the word pure feels appropriate. Sure, in my circles a lot of people were no-lifers (including myself), but I learned a lot and I also got to work on my English skills over the years. It was crazy to look at my writing when I started in comparison to 3-4 years later... astonishing, even!

    Fond memories...

    • ianai 1901 days ago
      On fun, games have certainly lost somethings along the way. I watched a friend view some snippets of Overwatch this past week. I was genuinely unimpressed with how little the graphics have come since quake2/3. I know other games look different, but I’m not seeing 20 years of progress. The mechanics of the game were clearly missing some of the old fun factors too.
      • Washuu 1901 days ago
        Overwatch is not the best example of graphical progress since they optimize for performance to be able to hit high FPS targets.
        • ianai 1901 days ago
          And that’s a good point. I’d expect better graphics at the same fps. But graphics hardware seems to be stagnant.
          • BoorishBears 1900 days ago
            I can’t tell if you’re trolling or just have the strongest case of nostalgia I’ve ever seen.
      • jimmy1 1901 days ago
        I used to think graphics mattered, and then I played BotW and Mario Odyssey on the Switch and I realized just how unimportant they are. (To be fair, the artwork is superb)
        • ianai 1901 days ago
          Nintendo is great for that. I don’t game much, but Nintendo seems to have a different take on gaming than others. They’ve always valued game play and being innovative over hardware performance or price increases.
  • joseph8th 1901 days ago
    Heh I mostly remember redialing BBSes waiting for the line to open so I could check for replies, play games, find other BBSes to call. It was all modem-to-modem and most BBS sysops only had one or 2 lines, with different phone numbers, so it was hard to connect. Also, as a teen, it was too expensive to dial long distance so I mostly just dialed into local boards. AmNet was an animal rights board. Wabbit Hole was my buddy Josh. We'd meet up IRL for beer (well those old enough had beer) and to trade software on floppies.

    My first modem was 300 baud and looked like the one in War Games, with the rubber cups [1]. Upgraded to 1200 bps, then saved and got a 2400 bps so I could run my own BBS, called Digital Mind with ASCII art I made of a brain made of 1s and 0s. Everyone had a handle. I was Quince. Dunno why now.

    LOVED IT.

    Had a program for my Apple IIgs that dialed random numbers and recorded any that answered with a modem. Then later I'd dial up and try to get in.

    My buddy, The Wabbit, had money and I remember in 1989 or so he started hosting an email node. I was so jelly I turned green.

    Then I graduated HS, decided to major in art, ended up travelling a few years and missed a few milestones. Made my first HTML site in 1996 and got paid $1500. Man I thought I was the shit. Then 4 years later I get a gig for a drum company and encounter PHP for the first time. Whoa. This ain't like Pascal, baby! Haha.

    [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modem

    • nerflad 1900 days ago
      Which drum company? I'm an aborted software developer and jazz drummer by trade.
      • joseph8th 1899 days ago
        Taos Drums (defunct now) made by Native American drummakers from Taos Pueblo. Beautiful but not traditional.
  • harel 1900 days ago
    1992 or 93. It was fun, exciting, nothing like anything we've experienced before on a computer. You surfed the net back then. A lot of centred text and DIY design aesthetics. Text was king, animated GIFs were used for rotating skulls and flames, and e-books (text files really) like the Anarchist Cookbook were the thing to read. IRC was where we talked to each other. Email was magic. I printed every single email I received during my first year or so. There was no spam. At a certain point Internet Explorer was actually ok if you can believe it. But before that Netscape was king. Yahoo was where things where organised. It was the "index", The Directory. Search engines made the directory obsolete. Google made search engines obsolete.

    During our first session I asked my friend if he thinks anyone will ever make money off this thing. We both answered with a "naaah" and kept on "surfing".

    I think today is better in many ways (and less so in some), but it would take a lot to impress old me now, while back then it was all just gobsmacking awesome.

  • kasey_junk 1901 days ago
    Slow and rare. It’s easy to forget this now with near ubiquitous high speed access but when you used the internet it was for a session. You’d sit down with an intention and be there for a while because the overhead of connecting and the loading speeds.

    Also when traveling finding a Internet cafe or a hotel with a connection was an important event because you could check in.

    • buboard 1900 days ago
      "Up all night and you only saw eight women."
  • mondo9000 1901 days ago
    You had to make it interesting. No twitter/instagram/youtube feed. You had to dig around for the exiting areas.

    One thing lost (maybe I am projecting here) is a sense of optimism... and the power of the individual (once upon a time L0pht declared they could take down the Internet in 30 mins) I once thought the information age would have a profound impact on democratic institutions, but this hasn't really panned out.

    Now the new frontier is being conquered by the State, hard censorship in China, soft censorship in the West (what if my employer reads this? will this get me banned from youtube / patreon / ...)

  • inDigiNeous 1901 days ago
    I want to touch on a subject that is not mentioned here so much yet, and that is online gaming.

    Specifically, Quakeworld and games coming after that. I still remember fondly how small the circles were, especially with Quakeworld. You could play on a server, and there were not that many, and actually see the same people there night after night, getting to know them and feel respect when you saw the more veteran ones entering the server.

    And actually talk to those same people in IRC afterwards. Nowadays, there are so many players everywhere that it's very difficult to have a sense of connection to the people, as most times you might never see the same players again or connect with them in any way.

    There was just so much more fun stuff happening there, when games were not nerfed to death and designed for everyone. I mean, nowadays when you play a online game, it's just so goddamn balanced and researched and overdesigned in many ways in modern games, and don't me let even start on the loot boxes and experience and all the crap around the core game logic that is not even relevant.

    Sometimes I miss those days where everything was smaller and not everyone was on the internet.

    • cybwraith 1901 days ago
      > And actually talk to those same people in IRC afterwards. Nowadays, there are so many players everywhere that it's very difficult to have a sense of connection to the people, as most times you might never see the same players again or connect with them in any way.

      Its not just that theres so many players. The big issue there is lack of server lists and player-run dedicated servers. Matchmaking largely kills that 'close-knit' sense of community where you play with and against the same rotation of players and get to know them. The only way to accomplish something similar is to find a community on discord, make a party together, etc. Its far simpler for everyone already owning and in the game to just click "Bob's great Quake CTF server" and know they'll be with whoever is normally on that server.

      • jungler 1901 days ago
        The money incentives have changed things too. People stream their gameplay for cash, and that has led to a rapid professionalization of gaming that wasn't there in the era of demo recordings and an occasional LAN event. It makes for more incentives to hide cheating or gatekeep your game sessions behind private Discords etc.

        Since the rise of Minecraft the games themselves have also gradually shifted towards being long-term platforms for streamer content, vs simply providing a fixed experience. Free-to-play economics likewise aim towards maximizing total lifetime value of each user(with a built in expectation of user turnover) instead of marketing towards the initial purchase.

        • jackfraser 1899 days ago
          > People stream their gameplay for cash

          This is still such a very strange thing for me. Truly one of the first things that has made me (as someone in my mid-30s) feel disconnected from the next generation.

          Why would I want to watch someone else play video games? If I had the time to do that, why wouldn't I just play the games myself? Where's the joy in it? The commentary? If I wanted commentary to listen to, wouldn't it make more sense for it to be about something real?

          I guess I'll just tie that onion onto my belt and call it a day.

          • kls 1899 days ago
            Same reason people watch sports. Many of the streamers are top of their game and people watch them to pick up tips and the learn new skill-sets in the gaming world. I am 44, I don't watch them but my boys do and I get it, where at first I had the same reaction. Which was basically why would you waist you time doing that.
    • karatefylla 1900 days ago
      Ah QuakeWorld and the golden era of gaming.

      I have fond memories from playing QW not online but also go to these small LANs in the middle of nowhere and meeting some of the top players in the world in person and getting to each other IRL.

      I'm still friends with some of the players from that time.

  • ArtWomb 1901 days ago
    There is a really great data dump for this: The USENET Archive of UTZOO Tapes. 7GB of plain text ASCII spanning the decade pre-1991, totaling more than 2M messages.

    https://ianmilligan.ca/2013/03/06/exploring-the-usenet-archi...

    Similar archives exist for Gopherspace and FTP binary collections. But as far as I know, there isn't really a great web frontend, indexed and searchable, to individual documents dated before 1994.

    As an example, original mosaic http browser post from Marc Andreessen ;)

    "Here is is, World!"

    https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/comp.infosystems.www.u...

    • joseph8th 1901 days ago
      I love that it was "so lame" and "useless" that Netscape Mosaic didn't have a print option in v0.9beta for Windows. Because obviously your gonna wanna print! Ah how times have changed. I don't even own a printer.
      • dingaling 1900 days ago
        I had several lever-arch folders of printed-out websites. Dial-up in the UK was too expensive to 'look it up again when I need it' so it was committed to hard-copy. I particularly remember NASA aerospace projects and the script of Aliens!

        Also common was dialling-in to download e-mail and Usenet and then going offline again to read them and compile responses which were cached until the next dial-in. Communication was much more async back then.

        I never really got into IRC as that required 'wasting phone time', in the UK we were charged by the minute just like a local phone call. So you made a plan, connected and went as fast as possible. This was assisted with printed Web Directory books which had URLs and summaries of the websites' contents!

  • higherpayusa 1900 days ago
    It was glorious. It really was. It felt like a childhood Christmas or Birthday every day for months. It was such an exciting time I could hardly sleep. That was 1997-98 after I broke free from AOL and started using Internet Explorer to surf the "real" web.

    I created my first website in 1998 simply because I had an idea I wanted to share and it went semi-viral. It wasn't about money or fame or anything else. 10 pages, Front Page 2.0, largest page 3K, $29.95/month hosting. Of course, if you count the 7K logo graphic (gif) the pages were really 10K!

    In my adult life only a few things have given me that same feeling of unbounded childhood excitement and freedom. Perhaps that's why I can't give up yet on the "promise" of the web even though corporate control and government surveillance seem to increasing daily.

  • flomo 1901 days ago
    I think I started using the Internet in 1990, and I was at the center of "GopherSpace". Email was the killer app, but otherwise it was only slightly useful for "information sharing". I recall pulling some US Census data, using a gateway to the university library catalog mainframe, and downloading Macintosh System 6 disk images. The entire AP wire was on Usenet too. But email was the real cool thing, you could communicate with your professors or friends at other colleges, or even meet people in bars who would give you their email address. This is when long-distance phone calls were like $1/minute so it was revolutionary.

    Usenet was a slow-moving discussion board consisting mostly of college students where you could argue about computers or Star Trek or whatever. The most popular group by far was "alt.sex". Most people posted with their real names, but when my friend posted with a female name, she quickly acquired a stalker. (Who was dealt with by being banned from the Internet by his college's sysadmins.)

    By the time Wired magazine was a thing and I wanted to start using the World Wide Web, Netscape 0.9 had come out and I guess corporations had already gotten their hands on it.

    I still have a printout of "Zen and the Art of the Internet" [0]. Check it out if you want to get an idea of what using the pre-commercial internet was like.

    [0] https://www.cs.indiana.edu/docproject/zen/zen-1.0_toc.html

    • josho 1901 days ago
      Usenet was incredible. For me it was like discovering Hacker News, but not just on a single topic, on any topic I could imagine. For those that never used Usenet it was a distributed point to point discussion system. Through your client you would download any updates of the forums you subscribed, and uploaded any new posts/replies. The server periodically synchronized with other servers.

      Because of its distributed and assumed trust nature there were no built in safeguards to combat spam. Over time spam increased, a tolerable amount at first. But, the problem grew until it killed the utility of the service.

      The closest analogy to usenet today is Reddit. Where we've normalized spam into a tolerable number of advertisements. Where we've traded off distributed systems to a single corporate control. The distributed nature meant you had multiple competing clients, corporate control today means you access through whatever mechanism the company authorizes.

      I miss usenet.

      • flomo 1901 days ago
        I miss pre-commercial Usenet too. But I think it was a completely different feel than HN/Reddit. You could surf the net for a couple hours, engage in a long-form argument, forget about it and come back a couple days later to reply. It wasn't like this where I'm replying to your "28 minutes ago" post.

        Also the environment was completely different. When people talk about Linus Torvalds being mean, there were a lot of people back then who had the mentality "I'm going to flame this moron off the Internet." I like the more friendly confines of HN.

        My take is Usenet was not so much killed by spam, but the lack of moderation. Eventually the unchecked kooks, flamers, stalkers, and etc made it uninhabitable.

        • saltcured 1901 days ago
          We had both aspects. Even on Usenet, some groups were so active and internet-connected that you would see the threaded discussion exploding around you in the minutes it took to write a reply. Others were more like putting a message in a bottle and checking back each day to see if a reply was floating back.

          In university, I also remember we had informal protocols for upgrading a conversation from email or newsgroup to more real time via shared systems on campus. We would use "talk" and "ytalk" to have something more instant than instant messaging... you would see each letter as the other party typed, rather than only seeing one chunk of text per enter key. One student group also used the MOTD on a shared system as a communal bulletin board, hosting elaborate chats a bit like graffiti tags answering each other.

          • jackfraser 1897 days ago
            I miss ytalk. Back in the day, a friend and I would essentially make our own RPGs over ytalk - one of us would be the game leader and would describe what happened like the perfect text adventure (which understands context and makes reasonable assumptions). Being able to see the other person type in realtime made it that much more fun.

            Simpler joys for a simpler time.

  • lmorchard 1901 days ago
    If memory serves, the internet before 1993 had an official policy via the NSF that all but forbid commercial use. No e-commerce, no advertising, etc.

    Sure, folks set up trades and conducted private sales via Usenet and whatnot. I think it was kind of frowned upon in many places, though. But, overall, it's weird to think that at one point, the whole net was basically non-profit.

    I think it was around 1993 that NSF started bringing in commercial network providers. By 1998, the core pieces of the net had gone private.

    • tptacek 1900 days ago
      It did. There was NSFNet and there was "UUNet". I remember a mid-1990s Internet-wide netsplit that cut Ripco off from all the .EDU sites.
    • bklaasen 1901 days ago
      Yasha Levine covers the commercialisation of the Internet very well in "Surveillance Valley".
  • buboard 1900 days ago
    It would help if you stated your age. The internet was probably most exciting before and around the 2000s, when there was an actual ton of information and facebook hadn't come around. A major thing is people did not use their real identity / names anywhere. It just wasn't a thing before facebook, and you could really be a dog or talk to a dog. That made everything exciting , mysterious and people found it a lot more easy to experiment , i.e. freedom. After facebook and real identity, the audience and the behaviors changed. There is distinctive lack of 'free spirits' in the internet that we see today. There was not an overabundance of information , and the audience was more technical / academic, so most of the information was OK.

    OTOH, the main applications were mostly the same: search, forums, groups, chat, packaged in different forms and in many small gardens instead of behind huge walled gardens.

  • makecheck 1900 days ago
    One thing that fascinated me early on was how the web was equal: <famous-company>.com had exactly the same lame, gray-with-text-and-slow-images site as some silly student web site. Or sometimes worse, as students had lots of time to fiddle around with HTML and Netscape, and companies hadn’t yet amassed entire organizations devoted to web presence. :) Most sites were also utilitarian; aside from maybe a logo here or there, they just gave you what you wanted (since they literally did not have much else).

    You really noticed image-loading. Each image gradually rendered into view, and sites still knew how to use them judiciously. And yet, since we’d never seen anything quite like it, we patiently waited to load every time. It was too cool to be a bother.

    The most mind-blowing thing was that you didn’t really need to know much to connect. I didn’t need network numbers or other weird stuff. I could simply guess a dot-com for something, and there it was! It wasn’t material printed in a book or mailed to me, it was just there, right when I asked, like a personal butler. At the time it was astounding.

  • open-source-ux 1901 days ago
    I don't think there was ever a point where the Internet existed in a "pure" form. Everyone will have their own recollection of the past, different from someone else. It's easy to be nostalgic about the past: some things were better then (industrial scale tracking of users was not a thing), other things are better now (like video streaming).

    - Search engines: There was more variety in search engines (including country-specific search engines). Examples: Alta Vista, Lycos, Yahoo, Excite, meta-search engines like Dogpile.

    - Serendipity: The earlier web felt more serendipitous - free web hosting sites encouraged people to put up personal sites on any topic that led you down a rabbit-hole of discovery. You may say: isn't that the case now? Maybe. It doesn't feel that way - but maybe that's perception rather than reality?

    - Designing web sites: CSS was full of crippling layout limitations in the early days. But there were also dozens of desktop website builders. They may have spit out horrible code, but they were far more accessible and usable to non-technical users compared to the dozens of static site generators loved only by developers today.

    - Complexity: Developers love complexity, and they simply cannot recognise it. What's striking today is how ludicrously complicated it is to deploy and host your site or app on a server. Who would have thought in 2019 that only WordPress would offer users a simply one-click install on the server. Meanwhile, developers stuck in their own little command-line bubble, remain baffled that anyone would struggle to self-host using a docker image or via cloudron ("What do you mean it's complicated?")

    - How reliable was information in the past? I don't think it was any more or less reliable in the past. There are reliable sources now that didn't exist in the early days of the internet (e.g. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/). But there also plenty of unreliable sources.

  • josteink 1901 days ago
    In one simple word: wonderful.

    A lot less useful, a lot less developed, but like the Wild West it was a place where you got to have fun, experiment, go wild and bend the rules. And unless you went too far, you would always be welcome back into the saloon once you’ve paid your penance.

    Everyone involved was passionate in what they did.

    Right now it looks like a country forever lost.

  • SuperNinKenDo 1900 days ago
    Harder to navigate, but great fun. Think searching through a record store by hand, not always knowing what you're looking for. Sometimes you're after that one album. Sometimes you're carefully parsing liner notes, sometimes you're just looking at the covers. And this record store gets all kinds of stuff in, from super mainstream, right through to limited run Split EPs of bands you've never heard of. And they're all mixed in together, but every record has instructions on how to find other records you might find interesting.

    I just realised this is a terrible metaphor because you're probably too young to get this metaphor. Actually I'm arguably too young, but I tend to like physical releases.

  • gabesk 1900 days ago
    Middle schooler in the mid 90's, sitting in the backseat of the car while parents drove around town on errands. 2 meter ham radio antenna on the roof, with a packet radio modem and black and white power book laptop running off the cigarette lighter jack. The local university had a packet radio - UNIX gateway with which you got a shell prompt via something akin to telnet. Fond memories of wireless browing the web over lynx and talking to people on IRC before anyone I knew had a cellphone.

    Also, the special treat of getting to go to the parent's lab from time to time and using this new fangled Netscape Navigator Beta on a blazing fast Macintosh II CI with more than 8 bit color! The fish cam was still one of the featured links on the browser homepage, and browsing NASA's site and being blown away at being able to see monitor-filling celestial objects in seconds.

  • webreac 1901 days ago
    When I was student (1990-1993), there was no firewall. My girlfriend was in another school in Paris (I was in Brest). I used xhtalk to see if she was logged in and chat with her. I could perform a rlogin on any computer of the other school. When I was at her school, I could run programs (like xdvi) remotely by exporting the DISPLAY. The file /etc/passwd contained the hashed passwords and with a simple dictionnary, you could find passwords in minutes.

    At that time, the main tools were newsgroups (for information sharing) and xarchie (to find ftp mirrors of free programs). I have used also gopher to find CERT list of vulnerabilities. I have found how to exploit one of them. I have notified the administrator. A couple of weeks latter, this was not fixed, I have setup a permanent root backdoor that was still working one year after my departure.

    There were "site" you could connect using telnet. For example igs (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Go_server). I remember also a site in australia that was used to find email adress of people from their name and their approximative location.

    Using the ping delay, you could know if your communication was going throw a satelite or not.

  • AngryData 1900 days ago
    Back when it was new everyone was telling kids "You know you can't believe whats on the internet, anyone can say anything!", but you actually could believe most of shit online at the time, there wasn't enough audience to attract trolls or vapid popularity contest types. The people online were people that tended to ignore social and cultural convention, idealists and progressive thinkers, since the people using the internet were largely still seen as stereotypical geeks or nerds with a similar assumed social status to neckbeards or hipsters have today.

    However, now that the internet has gotten popular, more people seem to just assume everything they see is real, which gives advertisers, trolls,corporations, pranksters, assholes, political propaganda, and crazies the platforms they need to spew their nonsense and get the feedback and responses they were looking for, reinforcing views and beliefs in that crazy shit no matter how obscure or unusual.

  • rb808 1901 days ago
    It was sparse. Strip away Facebook, Google, all the phone apps, all the commercial news sites, blogs, you're left with a a few specialist resources. Now imagine without browsers, just ftp and email (for students, academics and a few tech companies only). That is about it. It was exciting and new but not really that useful. Usenet was a bit like Reddit but smaller and text only, and friendly, but that was the highlight for me.
    • neffy 1901 days ago
      Usenet being "friendly" was not exactly my recollection of alt.politics.*

      Whatever happened to Serdar Argic?!

      • macintux 1900 days ago
        Serdar Argic’s successors run a depressing amount of the world today.
    • KineticLensman 1901 days ago
      > It was exciting and new but not really that useful

      Well, the FAQs under the comp.sci usenet newsgroup hierarchy were a truly awesome resource when I was a C++ dev in the early '90s.

    • andyidsinga 1901 days ago
      I was trying get to come up with pretty much your exact comment ..sparse with a sense of excitement pretty much spot on!
  • vnorilo 1901 days ago
    Some of my teenager memories from the late 90s: suddenly finding communities sharing my niche interests (fantasy books, korg trinity sequences) that I never had access to. I also found Julius Smith's DSP book and several lecture notes from different universities which made a big impact on my career decades later. The only ads were for web rings, which seems quaint now. At least the DSP stuff was world class and freely shared.
  • systematical 1901 days ago
    By the time I started using the internet around 1995 businesses definitely had a presence. But the web felt far more decentralized, open, and laissez-faire. It was a movement and like any new movement it just felt so happening. Today, outside of a random tech blog, it feels like I go to the same sites over and over again.

    In the mid-nineties if you wanted to talk about your favorite band, you'd cobble together a site in something like tripod, geocities, or even expages. Then link to other slapdash fan pages. Today you go to a subreddit or setup a medium blog. Want to chat? Then you'd go onto IRC, ICQ (remember that?) or a random website running a Java Applet. Today its slack.

    Economies of scale always win. We lose something beautiful in the process, gaining only nostalgia for something we'll never get back.

    I actually write about this a bit in a book I'm slowly writing, Wanking in Hostels, https://pastebin.com/u/drifterzero

  • lisper 1900 days ago
    That depends on what you consider to be "the Internet". Strictly speaking, "the Internet" is the infrastructure that moves data around using the IP protocol. But what most people think of as "the Internet" is really the "world-wide web", i.e. a collection of content served via HTTP and accessed with a browser.

    There was never a "purest form" of the WWW. Corporations had their hand in that almost from the very beginning. Netscape was founded to make money, and today's Internet would not exist but for that motivation.

    One the other hand, the "purest form" of the Internet still exists today. That consists of someone writing some code that opens a TCP or UDP socket and starts sending bytes. That resulted in things like FTP, NNTP (i.e. usenet), gopher, and even HTTP (for a very short period of time before Netscape came along). Since then that same motivation and dynamic has produced TOR, bitcoin, Skype, Signal, and dozens of other applications, most of which languish in well deserved obscurity. The main difference between today's dynamic and the pre-netscape dynamic is 1) the net is much, much faster and universally accessible today and 2) the vast majority of people on the net today are non-technical, whereas in the good old days the net was populated almost exclusively by science and engineering academics.

    The quality of the information available on the net is both better and worse today than it was in the early days. Wikipedia is a modern miracle. There has never been anything like it in the history of human civilization. Before 1990 if you wanted access to the kind of information that you can get on Wikipedia you had to go to a university library.

    One the down side, all that good information is often drowned out by bad information put out by people who are poorly informed or who have political agendas. But it's not too hard to build yourself a pretty effective bullshit detector. That's a useful life skill to have both on-line and IRL.

  • hkt 1901 days ago
    The purest representation of this I can conceive of is SDF. See: SDF.org

    I remember reading the descriptions of user areas on their MUD when I was a teenager in the 00s and feeling like it was a portal back in time (to the early 90s, admittedly) when the internet was more about creation and communication rather than media consumption. It was incredible to feel the continuity in this beautiful, fragile and very very idealistic but which was able to be true to those ideals as well.

    The area I refer to is still there in the MUD, by the way, it is called Swanbrook. If you ever play, look behind the altar and you get to read a message from the area's creator, signed off as Snowbird. That message actually introduced me to the rolling stones. Not bad for something written thirty years ago on a very obscure bit of the internet.

  • spiritcat 1901 days ago
    Everything was always under construction.
    • philjohn 1901 days ago
      And viewed best in either IE 4 or Netscape Navigator.
      • M2Ys4U 1900 days ago
        Which is totally different from today when everything is in beta and best viewed in Chrome!
  • latchkey 1901 days ago
    When I got my first email address in college in 1991, I had no idea what to do with it cause I didn't know anyone else with one.

    Ended up finding some lists where you could e-penpal with random people around the world. Chatted with some people in Australia (I was in Los Angeles), when their internet was working (the connection would go down or be slow for them quite a bit).

    I ran an internet BBS called 'Dolphin Cove BBS' [1] which had people randomly chatting about stuff I don't even remember.

    I setup a CU-SeeMe server (early video chat room software) and found out from some other people that it had been used for... oh gawd... porn!, over the weekend while I was gone.

    I remember when it was frowned upon to advertise for business purposes on places like usenet. I setup a gopher and ftp server and put information about my school on it. That didn't last long because Mosiac came out not too long after that.

    finger was a big thing to share information and snoop on people.

    The green terminals were so slow that you could read the letters as they formed words on the screen.

    There used to be a lot of well maintained FAQ's hosted on usenet. The information there was quite good and informative. The early days were filled with the smart people who were focused on building the early internet, so I think the information was a lot more trusted.

    [1] http://bio4human.fortunecity.ws/jang/bbs.htm

  • gorpomon 1901 days ago
    Mid 90's internet user here.

    A lot of CD's in the mail from ISP's and AOL, we'd try a new one out periodically that offered free internet access. For a while we used Juno's free internet tier. It had a permanent pop-up you couldn't remove from your desktop, but it was free internet so we kept it for a long time.

    There were also weird local ways of getting online. Our small town had a school supplied ISP type thing. It loaded up a local town bulletin board, and I don't think you could access other sites. Within a few years it was phased out.

    The content was sparse, but always engaging. Before there were blogs, people just had sites and the sites had interesting content. As I recall it went far beyond nerd/sci-fi stuff. I remember finding a site that had images of scans of things people put up their rectum, it was wild. I remember going to my local gas station to get a money order to pay for a Japanese Sega Saturn game I bought on Ebay with a money order. I mailed the money order and got the game.

    Nothing was openly monetized, but ads were ever present, and by the late 90's pretty hard to avoid. It was hard to imagine the ads would wind up as openly malevolent as they are now, but I guess young kids don't have that type of imagination. I'm sure many saw the writing on the wall.

    I miss that internet. That internet immediately reminds me of home. It's an internet that is largely gone, but not because it's destroyed, but because we moved on. We could all still spin up sites in html/css, but we don't. That's ok, time changes and folks move on.

  • digitalzombie 1901 days ago
    Uh... pretty close knit. There were no search engines. There were only directories with dedication toward search hobby/interesting.

    I was pretty big into anime fanfic so anipike was the web directory I went to. The fan sites via xoom, geocities, tripod, angelfire are linked via web ring. Web ring is like a circle of website with similar interest and individual anime website would have a web ring to help find other similar website within the web ring. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webring

    The ads weren't bad it was banners and it blinks or slide across like marquee html tag. The majority of the web ads felt like print paper ads less scientific like today. Today ads they got metric, funnel, and trying to get more eyeballs on it, very gamey to get your attention which I believe leads to addiction and click bait stuff.

    The user involvement was less, social aspect seems to be around hobbies. Now a day you can try to catch up with your friends via facebook, snapchat, etc.. it seems like everybody is trying to get approval by online friends by having that awesome picture while traveling and doing stuff.

    There was a famous newsletter I follow for my fanfiction too (rec.arts.anime.creative).

    • tejtm 1901 days ago
      And there was plain old searching. the idea that you could expect someone to hand you whatever you asked for had not been formed yet. So if you were interested, then you looked, reading everything gathered clues, scribbled down paths to check later.

      No current results page with 73,345,507 entries will come close to finding a directory with bitmaps of planets/moons there for the asking deep in jpl or some place.

    • bigger_cheese 1901 days ago
      I wasn't that big into anime but I used to love Evangelion (I still do) after it aired on television here in Australia around 97/98 some of the first web pages I can remember visiting were fan pages for that series. The X Files was other big thing I use to look up online. I was pretty much obsessed with that TV show when I was a kid.

      >The ads weren't bad it was banners and it blinks or slide across like marquee html tag.

      I can definitely remember ads getting worse and worse. At first they weren't bad but by 1999 or so it was pretty horrendous popup ads were massively prevalent. I can remember needing to run a separate pop up blocker app before browsers started building blockers in.

      HTML blink tags were definitely a thing there were some eye bleeding websites using blink.

      Trying to use search engines for researching high school projects was a pain you'd need to use 5 or 6 different search engines - Lycos, Infoseek, Metacrawler, Yahoo etc and each search would give you different results you'd be lucky if 30% of results were relevant to your topic. Dial up was so slow as well (at least at my school) it often wasn't worth the time to try using internet for researching assignments. It wasn't until I started university and found out about online journals that it really became a useful research tool.

      Plugins used to be a big thing stuff like Real Player, Shockwave, java applets etc I'm pretty sure at some point Flash basically killed all these but for a while it was kind of a wildwest. Video online was almost never worth it. It would take forever to download half the time you wouldn't have the right codec to play it and quality was generally so terrible it was borderline unwatchable - everything looked like one giant pixel.

      I can remember being introduced to Slashdot it was the site for a while I was a pretty late comer and it was huge in the late 90's I used to check it multiple times a day.

    • classichasclass 1901 days ago
      > no search engines

      There was Veronica in the Gopher days. It was always busy, but it was nice that it came from educational institutions (UNR's is what I used locally). I don't think anyone at UNR remembers they ran it.

      Oh, and Archie.

      • jerrysievert 1901 days ago
        and altavista. OP noted a few things that started around the same time as altavista. fun was looking yourself up in altavista and being amazed.

        webrings were fun, but I really have nostalgia for Archie and MUDs.

      • cordonbleu 1901 days ago
        and JUGHEAD
    • monk_e_boy 1901 days ago
      There were a ton of scavenger hunts. With questions like, what is the first rocket on the NASA home page. They were tricky with no search engines.
  • manicdee 1900 days ago
    The Internet has never existed in a “pure” form. It has always been balkanised, with different groups of people mixing with themselves more or less oblivious to the other groups around them.

    Information sharing in “the good old days” was often via Usenet, IRC, BBS or email. The networks that were important were the people you knew, and membership of an IRC channel was a privilege not a right. If you stepped out of line you would be warned and banned. Large groups were still easily moderated because the peak level of “firehose” traffic was still humanly consumable. There were career-affecting repercussions from misbehaving in, say, Scary Devil Monastery. You would lose access to your support base and have to fend for yourself.

    Information was mostly reliable, mostly because the level of expertise was high, the signal to noise ratio was high, and the chances were if you gave some advice there would be someone testing your claims and reporting back.

    The “denvercoder9” problem was always there of course. Stack Overflow and Quora have neither invented that problem nor solved it.

    Ultimately my rose-coloured nostalgia of the original Internet is that the level of expertise and interpersonal support was quite high, simply because non-academic access to the Internet was not easily available.

    • jrumbut 1900 days ago
      The flip side of the level of expertise being high was that the expected level of expertise was high. If you even found documentation showing how to do stuff it would often be taken for granted that you knew you had to recompile your kernel after step 4 and update your PATH and all that.

      The ethos at the time was that you had to learn things the hard way, RTFM, and not spoon feed others who hadn't put in the work.

      If there's one thing I'm glad about on the new Internet, it's that there's a lot more effort given to reader friendly documentation.

      All of this is to say, kids these days have it easy!

  • wyck 1901 days ago
    It was amazing, so much energy and excitement. No one used HTTP, no one was selling anything. It was mainly about communication over usenet , email, and irc. Public ISP's didn't exist.

    The corporations were not really the first one to monetise and usher in e-commerce/www, it was porn, this ushered in lots of new tech.

    The internet switched from active participation to passive consumption, and now we have both except now everything is monetised, monitored, and moderated.

    It was the wild west.

    • turtlecloud 1901 days ago
      Is it still the Wild West??
      • wyck 1901 days ago
        No, not at all.
        • philpem 1900 days ago
          It's more like Walmart than the Wild West.
  • gooseyard 1900 days ago
    I was on in the early 90s via my university's 56k frame relay rig. Maybe the most exciting thing I can ever remember doing was that, because this was way before dialup TCP/IP, I'd use my 2400 baud modem to dial the university's modem pool, which was attached to a DECnet terminal server. Since this was a state university, if you knew the name of any other terminal server on that DECnet network, you could attach to it and issue commands. We had a few local BBSs, but the city where the larger state university was located had many more (I couldn't dial them direct because it was long distance and $$$), but once I found the name of a terminal server in the other city, I could connect to it, and if any of the attached modems were not in use, you could send AT commands to dial out.

    The first time I was able to log in to one of the BBSs in the other city by dialing my local terminal server, hopping over decnet to Morgantown and then dialing out to a BBS with no long distance charges, I thought I would die of joy. Closest thing to magic I ever experienced I think, despite how low tech it sees now.

  • smelendez 1901 days ago
    I'm not sure if there was ever a purest form or that we'll ever agree on what it was. Pre-Web? Pre-smartphone?

    But smartphones drove a huge push towards centralization. Ten years ago, when the Internet was mostly on desktops and laptops, you might have a few sites you regularly visited and would pop open in different browser tabs when you sat down at your computer. Once smartphones became dominant, people started spending a lot more time on a handful of big sites and apps: Facebook, Twitter and friends.

    It's harder to build a site that works reasonably well on smartphones than on desktops, so companies with big IT budgets to develop a nice cross-device UI suddenly had a huge leg up on attracting visitors and getting them to come back. It's also harder to type on a phone, which meant people spent less time searching and typing in memorized URLs and more time scrolling through newsfeeds.

  • pier25 1901 days ago
    I connected for the first time in 96 with a 28.8k modem to print lyrics on paper from my favorite bands. At that time it was usual to go to a friend's house to go online. A lot of people didn't even have a PC at home (at least in Spain).

    It was like being in a little village in the far west. Very few sources of information. Not very sophisticated. Everyone saw the potential and was super optimistic about it. Like all new things it was a very special feeling.

    Now it's like being in a huge megalopolis. There's information and people everywhere, a lot of noise. Civilization is here with its good and bad things.

    I'm not sure I preferred it before. Connections were super slow which meant no Youtube, no Netflix, no online gaming (other than slow Yahoo games), no Wifi, etc.

  • blihp 1901 days ago
    In the pre-web world email, FTP (or going back further Kermit), Usenet and for some IRC was the Internet for most users. For many who weren't directly connected, things like UUCP (Unix-to-Unix Copy) was used to batch transfer email and Usenet feeds in the middle of the night. Anonymity was the norm. Plaintext passwords (telnet/FTP) in transit... when passwords were even used.[1] Everything was standards-based and mostly text-based. Text based UIs... even the GUIs on high-end (for the time) desktops were just wrappers around text. Manually maintained host files in the pre-DNS world. No advertising.[1] No user tracking. Server logs were considered chaff and discarded after a couple of months if there were no security/server issues to investigate. Slow... yet felt more responsive since getting 2k of text only took a bit over 2k of data transfer rather than the 500k+ it takes on many pages today with their Javascript/CSS/etc payloads. While primitive, to someone tech savvy who grew up with tech in the last 10 years it probably wouldn't feel completely alien... just spartan and antiquated.

    [1] It's really hard to convey this but because the community was so much smaller back then bad behavior could and would get you banned from the few key service providers, servers available and/or shunned by other users. So if you wanted to be online you generally behaved semi-decently or you were gone. It was not uncommon for complete a-holes to be killfile-d by many on Usenet effectively rendering them invisible. Spamming people's email would get you filtered (sometimes at the server level) and, again, rendered you invisible. If none of that worked, complaints would pile up with your service provider (while you could be anonymous, your provider often wasn't in the form of mail/Usenet headers) and depending on how bad it was they (often your school or employer for most) would have no problem terminating your access. The rise of AOL really marked the beginning of the end of these norms... (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September)

  • scanr 1901 days ago
    Terry Pratchett used to hang around on alt.fan.pratchett. When he came to South Africa, me and a few other folk from the news group had dinner with him.
  • ForHackernews 1901 days ago
    Some of the great old sites are still there, for example, The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5: http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/lurker.html (updated since 1994)
  • yodsanklai 1901 days ago
    I started using internet in 1996 I think. And I remember reading an article at that time saying that we should enjoy internet now before it becomes full of ads and taken over by corporations. At that time, I didn't get the point of the article and couldn't envision what internet would become.

    To answer the question, I remember using IRC and newsgroups. I spent nights trying to find interesting content on the web (mostly personal webpages, before blogging was a thing). There was no wikipedia, no youtube, search engines sucked. Besides, there wasn't that much content in my language and I didn't speak so much English at the time.

    I also remember when Youtube started. I naively wondered how personal videos could ever be interesting!

  • jerkstate 1900 days ago
    I remember, from the early 90s, reading all sorts of text files, from Phrack to Cult of the Dead Cow to Anarchists Cookbook to the Jargon File and Hacker Purity Test type stuff. I remember one "phile" in particular about how to make a soda machine malfunction and dump its coins by pouring saltwater into the coin slot, to phreaking and "social engineering" tutorials in phrack, to drug use and hacking war stories from cDc. Many of these "philes" were indexed on FTP and Gopher servers, or available from BBS download areas.

    Early websites.. I remember reading Dr. Fun which was pretty similar to Far Side and all online. Church of the Subgenius had some really excellent subversive humor online, lots of fun as a young subversive teenager to read it and imagine what the authors were like. I think that just hearing about that kind of culture was a big escape for me as a teen in a rural area.

    Searching was terrible especially in the early days before the web. There was a tool called Archie to search for filenames on FTP servers, and it took hours to generate results. Yahoo made it easier to find good resources, Lycos, Hotbot, and eventually Altavista were rudimentary web search engines that were pretty low quality. Site admins linked their websites to other like-minded sites in "webrings" to help find similar content.

    I think that the lack of discoverability, fragmentation, and ephemerality (because hosting space WAS expensive so things DID get deleted) led to a greater sense of freedom of expression. I remember the old saying "on the internet nobody knows that you're a dog." (I just looked that up and it's a New Yorker cartoon from 1993 - very apropos for the time). I feel like that's the biggest change over the last ~30 years I have been online, the fact that most popular forums either use your real identity or are barely pseudononymous, and the understanding that today everything you do online is tracked, stored forever, and analyzed by multiple government and commercial entities.

    So yeah, it was pretty great when it was like the wild west, but it's a lot more "useful" today.

  • axaxs 1901 days ago
    For starters, most people on the internet were science/tech minded, since it was rather niche. Webrings were a big thing, as a way to attempt to try to share traffic between similar sites.

    As for the websites themselves, it was pure HTML. It generally wasn't pretty, but loaded as fast as it does now due to the lack of JS and CSS imports, ads, analytics, etc. One of my favorite sites to browse to this day is reminiscent of how most pages of that time looked - http://www.thekeyboard.org.uk.

    Don't be fooled into thinking it was more innocent, though. But it sure was a fun time, and felt a lot more wild west, in a good way, than it does today.

  • api 1901 days ago
    I was there, but barely.

    Sites were generally labors of love regardless of accuracy or credibility. There were cold hard facts and hard science. There was also a substantial amount of wild theorizing about UFOs, parapolitics, or bigfoot, but almost all of it was presented in this basically honest way. It was just people putting up information that interested them.

    There were political sites but they were mostly straightforward and honest, even the extreme ones. If a site or forum was for Nazis or Leninists, it said so.

    Ads and other clutter were more minimal. This was before the dynamic web so documents were just hypertext except for a few forms and little basic widgets.

    A condensed description of the early net would be: uncluttered and mostly honest.

    IMHO three things killed this information (relative) paradise: spam, gamification, and manipulative propaganda techniques.

    These are listed roughly in order.

    Spam came first and killed all the open federated systems like usenet, free blog comments, trackbacks, etc. Anything not gated became deluged by spam. Email almost died too but in the end was too valuable to abandon, but it was "saved" largely by being taken over by a small number of providers with the resources to fight spam. To this day running your own mail server is a big PITA.

    The next blow was gamified social media and the algorithmic timeline. Social media started to eat the open web quickly, but social media itself was still mostly neutral until social feeds started to be driven by engagement maximizing algorithms and popularity started to be gamified. Humans started getting trained to optimize the content they create for the algorithm, and since that is optimizing for engagement that means divisive, sensational, or click bait content wins. The algorithms have basically nudge theory trained us all to be tabloid copy writers.

    Last came firms like Cambridge Analytica and their ilk that view the net as a way to do con artistry at scale. Now you can't even trust that the content is real at all or that the "people" posting it are honest or are real people. I also call this "spam 2.0". Spam 1.0 was the same message blasted everywhere. Spam 2.0 is spam personalized by AI and content mills.

  • kyriakos 1901 days ago
    I remember a time when search engines were just link directories. Finding stuff was hard but at the same time we used to pay more attention and read through the information, I feel like now attention span is very short.
  • zupatol 1901 days ago
    Around the year 2000, there still was almost no advertising on the internet. I remember that a search for "how to meet women" returned a website with lots of pages/chapters into which someone had obviously poured a lot of earnest effort. The advice sounded sensible. The only thing I remember is that it recommended to work on yourself, in particular to develop a sense of responsibility, and said that getting a dog could give you a first taste of it.

    I think it was actually called "how to meet women", but it's impossible to find today.

  • rtchau 1900 days ago
    I first got on the internet in 1996, so it was pretty much all IRC and personal sites built in Netscape. :-) And a (now conspicuous) lack of information landfill (the sheer amount of garbage on the internet today saddens me).

    In all seriousness, even though 1996 is not "early" internet, I still look back on when it still seemed like a frontier. I hope there's another innovation that gives everyone the same sense of exploration and being on the bleeding edge - I've no doubt there will be, but I'll be damned if I know what it is.

    • buboard 1900 days ago
      > but I'll be damned if I know what it is

      probably biology, or brain-machine stuff

  • vertline3 1900 days ago
    I think it was better, but maybe less addicting. Quirky blogs, when you wanted to know something very often you were linked to a professor's page, more text, less interaction. Though there still were forums, there was less of the comment board stuff everywhere. Less emphasis on social. Also there was some really bad design. HTML was trying to also style things and people would get really cute with colors and animation effects. It was pretty tacky. I guess this is after the time when it was academic, but before Facebook.
  • napsterbr 1901 days ago
    Not exactly related to big corporations getting control over the Internet, but I remember when I was 12 I would browse all day on underground hacking sites.

    These sites had usually a dark theme, the hilarious feature of blocking right click (usually followed by a JS alert saying something like "Copyright - create your own content") and several script kiddies tutorial. There even were some phreaking articles!

    It wasn't that long ago, maybe around 2005, same period I started using computers. I wonder, do websites like these still exist?

  • greyhaireduser 1900 days ago
    Anyone else remember netcom.com? [1]

    When I finished college in 1989 I moved to Silicon Valley and found work. I sorely missed the Internet access I had enjoyed at the University. About a year later I heard about a dial up system called Netcom and immediately signed up. They offered email, internet news (NNTP), and even command line access. Wonderful!

    One story I can recall:

    The system grew until netcom consisted of 15 or 20 Sun OS 4.x servers.

    One night a user wrote a shell script to poll all the servers, locate the server with the lightest load, and then log into that system. They shared the script and within hours many users were running the script in their login file. Since there was no check to see if the script was already in use in that session, long chains of user logins bounced around the systems resulting in an early DDOS shutdown.

    Good times, until about 2000 when the buyers of Netcom eventually shut down shell account service [2]

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netcom_%28United_States%29

    [2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/business/technology/2...

    • DrScump 1895 days ago

        Anyone else remember netcom.com?
      
      I was an early Netcom user. In fact, I had what they called a PNC (Personal Network Connection) account, which offered full TCP/IP connectivity and shell access.

      When that was killed, I moved to accesscom.com to keep full access, including shell... until that went away as well.

  • sys_64738 1901 days ago
    It was mostly academic with some small ISPs until that fateful day in Sept 1993 when AOL cast its shadow of death over the internet. It's been downhill since then all the way, IMO.
    • jasonjayr 1901 days ago
      AKA -- "The Eternal September". Remember, previously September only lasted as long as it took new college kids with fresh access to the internet (Usenet) to learn the customs and ways of the community....
  • mrami 1901 days ago
    My first experience on the Internet was when I got to college in the fall of 1992.

    I had done lots of BBSing before that, and I treated the Internet the same way - a bunch of different tools to get the same sort of social experience.

    Email w/ pine. BBS message boards became Usenet w/ trn. Gopher. Finding random people with finger, and chatting with ytalk. Once talked with a random girl named Thuy in Perth, which blew my mind at the time. Some shlub in the US sending messages live to Australia. Downloading all sorts of freeware from wuarchive.wustl.edu.

    It felt smaller then, and something inviting (to me at least). You'd recognize email addresses from one corner popping into a new one, and it gave the whole Internet a sense of continuity. It was a place I wanted to interact with.

    Usenet, in particular, was usually a pretty good source of information. As a matter of course, people attached their email address to each posting. And they usually only had one - HoTMaiL and its ilk wouldn't come around until '96 or so. If you saw an email address you recognized, you'd have an idea of trustability.

    Today, I really don't contribute much. I don't surf r/new or whatever, so somebody else has usually said anything I want to say. C'est la vie.

  • TheOtherHobbes 1901 days ago
    Somewhere I have a printout (made by a lineprinter on genuine lined computer paper) of the full list of hosts accessible on Arpanet in the early 80s.

    It has something like 30 systems on it.

    Email sort of worked between compatible systems, and telnet - or something like telnet, more or less - was the primary way of getting around.

    Sometime around 1983 I had an IRC conversation with someone at a big US consultancy who couldn't believe that I was in another country and not trolling him from a nearby room.

    I rejoined in 1994 when The Real Internet was just getting started. Technical setup with a TCP stack and 9600 modem on Windows was a nightmare, and dial-up costs were charged per minute, so usage soon got expensive.

    Demon, then the UK's only-ish ISP, didn't have enough lines, so it was usual to have to attempt ten or more calls before getting a slot.

    The web was appallingly slow, with grainy low-res imagery and shitty stock fonts. MP3s file took minutes to download. Video might as well have been science fiction, although a lot of both were distributed on Usenet in parts - sometimes hundreds of parts, which had to be stitched together before the file could be played.

    But the culture was cool. Very weird and oddball. And HTML 1.0 was so simple almost anyone could make a page. Most ISPs included some web hosting, so a lot of people did. (I had friends who knew very little about computing who made simple pages with a text editor.)

    The corporates moved in a few years later. Quirk still exists in odd little corners, but the Internet is much more of a relentless money machine now.

    • bluedino 1901 days ago
      >> Sometime around 1983 I had an IRC conversation with someone at a big US consultancy

      IRC didn’t exist then. So it was some other chat or you mistyped the date

      • tejtm 1901 days ago
        most likely 'talk'

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk_(software)

        It is how I got my first rude internet experience. Some brat started writing weird cursing things at someone they did not even know! I reported them to the sysops so I'm sure they received a sternly worded reprimand with a warning they could be banned and certainly they would see the error of their ways and never do anything like that again ...

        I should have seen this comming

  • keithnz 1901 days ago
    In the early 90s the internet wasn't very well known. But when I got on, you'd dial in to a shell with a terminal emulator and it was all Usenet, FTP, Telnet, Email, IRC, Gopher and this new WWW thing was being talked about. Usenet was probably the king of the net at that stage. When I first got on ( I actually did use usenet in the 80s at my dads work, but it wasn't till I could dial up from home did I engage with the internet), it was like discovering this secret world that virtually no one else knew about.

    I used FTP, Usenet and Gopher a lot to get information, and while its nothing compared today, in those days it was magic. Instead on being entirely reliant on books and magazines to give you information, you suddenly could start consuming a whole bunch of info for free. It's hard to describe how amazing that felt, it unlocked information for the information starved.

    The ability to download software was also amazing. I used to get magazines with disks on their covers with cool things to play with, but now, I could get LOTS of software. ( Also used BBS's for this )

    IRC was in the early days when I first went on ( only a few hundred users at any given time on EFnet, the only network at the time) and I made friends all around the world ( including some of the very first IRC users ). At that stage, everyone was equally awed by how you could talk live with people all around the world. Also you got live updates on world events by people who were there. No waiting to hear about things on the news or in the newspaper. Amazing.

    Then within a few years, people started making some big money from the internet, and things quickly started to change, peaking with the dot.com boom and bust.

  • fartcannon 1901 days ago
    I recall chatrooms that were bulletin boards that you had to manuall refresh to see new messages. I remember webrings, webcrawler and how all chat services had a 'random' option.. so you could chat to people you'd never met. Typically you'd open with "hi a/s/l?" Hi, Emma.

    I met many long term long distance friends on early bulletin boards. My favourite of which was the unmod board at ocremix. Thanks djpretzel!

  • z_ 1901 days ago
    It was like a giant phone book that could take you to magical places, hours would pass in an instant, and discovery was beautiful.
  • ryanmercer 1900 days ago
    Pre-Google search engines were pretty hit or miss, you were better off finding a relevant webring and clicking 'next' until you found a page that had what you wanted. I used Infoseek, WebCrawler when it would load, ditched Infoseek for Lycos, ditched Lycos for Excite. I used AltaVista semi-frequently from 95 up to 2000 or 2001 when I'd almost entirely switched to Google. I'm fairly certain I've used Yahoo to search EXCLUSIVELY for when I was checking search rankings for my own page and never for anything else.

    I remember the first time I saw a video clip, the first time I saw a gif, the first time I saw a still image on a website.

    I remember having to redial multiple times to get connected during high demand times.

    I remember IRC (still use it daily).

    I remember MUDs (still play one weekly, that I played starting in 97 or 98 and it still has 10-15 people on whenever I log on).

    I remember the dial-up handshake, in fact I recorded it and it has been my ringtone since 2004.

  • petemc_ 1901 days ago
    Worked at a university in the 90s. Staff (above a certain level) had access to dial back system, for which we would configure their modem to dial our system and then drop the call and we would call them back and provide network/internet access. This was in the uk where free local calls weren't the norm and dial up isps such as freeserve hadn't appeared yet. There was also a noticeable drop in the speed of the universities internet connection around lunchtime which was generally put down to "America logging on".

    When I got my first cable modem around 2000 you could scan local network segment for open smb ports and map other users drives, usually rw. Saw some interesting stuff doing that. Was pretty cool to access the many open ftp servers too. I think the original version of the audiogalaxy music finder app was just a front end to search those.

  • markdeloura 1901 days ago
    What I remember most is what a big deal it was when UseNet started allowing ads - I want to say that was 1992 or so. Pre-WWW, UseNet was essentially a big BBS or social network for information sharing. I helped run the virtual reality newsgroup, sci.virtual-worlds, and the community building that happened as a result of the open sharing of information was incredible. It seemed as if all the experts were connected and willing to discuss their work for the good of the field. You assumed that if a person was on the Net, they were probably at a research institution or site with enough importance to be connected. Advertising your company's products was a real taboo, and people would get booted for it. Don't get me wrong, there were definitely flame wars... but for academic information sharing, the early Net in this period was invaluable.
  • nopriorarrests 1901 days ago
    It was not "browser only" internet.

    There were plenty of apps for different things.

    At least for music/file sharing, there were: Napster, Soulseek, eMule and many others. Then, chat clients: AIM, ICQ, IRC.

    I was also using chess clients, and it was perfectly normal to have 5-6 different apps running, all of them being clients to different web services.

    fun times

  • ngcc_hk 1900 days ago
    Actually before al gore allow USA firm to do internet it is very hard to get to it. At least not around the world.

    Around 1993 it started to move to the world after film can sell internet bandwidth (and in fact mine come from a firm under a U). As mac user at home, has to wait until the mac internet guide before dialup modem work.

    As commentary before it is very exploratory. Zen and the Art, gopher, mosaic comes along.

    And email group. And you can pay internet Go server even then using ascii client.

    Still remember answer a question what and where is Vulcan? The usual answers pop up but my answer that it is the planet sit between mercury and the sun is a big surprise in those days without wiki. Even for Trekkie. Just nice days.

  • kkylin 1900 days ago
    I got my email address when I started college, in the early 90s. You didn't use it much except to communicate with people you knew in real life. It replaced letter-writing, certainly, but otherwise not a huge change.

    During college years, first we got Mosaic then Netscape, and more and more one went on-line to look for non-academic information, e.g., I remmeber when NYT on-line started. My first summer job in college, at the MIT Media Lab, was in a group where people were talking about building a mainframe, digitize movies, and serve (this was before "stream" became mainstream) them to people at home. I remember thinking: "Who'd pay for that?"

  • Meph504 1900 days ago
    Really depends, as what you are describing spanned likely a nearly 25 year span (give or take a few.)

    but for me, the heyday, was the mid90s to early 2000s. it was a magical place full of "Under Construction" webpages (static hand coded HTML webpages), and user run linking networks called "Web Rings." Web rings, basically if someone linked to you, you linked back to them, and to someone else, typically there would also be a link to an index of all in the ring, a random button, and generally some sort of image related to the ring, they generally followed some sort of theme, star trek fans, college alumni, mudds/fantasy games, etc...

    The browser wars where still a thing, and the look and feel of the internet wasn't settled, browsers where implementing there own features, that were wildly divergent from each other, and sometimes the same functionality, that required completely different code to perform it. Java Applets, where the bees knees, and mostly pointless, but pretty features to the web (water ripple effects on images...)

    Gif or any animated image format was still a heavily contested copyright issue. And droves of people from all over the world were pouring "online."

    Highschool and colleges, trying to come up with a way to "cite" webpages like book authors. (url, author, publish date.)

    The organization of the net, was very much akin to the wild west, small clusters of interlinked sites serving as frontier towns, universities played a huge role, as they often had the students who had the brains, time, and inclination, to create sites, and generally small of enough to maintain a "sitemap" of all of their pages.

    No real way to search all of the net, no "social networks", chatrooms and IRC were hot beds of communications, and because of the loose coupling, it was much easier to meet people, and actually become friends with them.

    I'd say it wasn't until pop-ups started showing up everywhere and people started buying goods online, did the web shift its direction.

    And though I tech is amazing today, I still feel we aren't the better for it.

  • jbuzbee 1900 days ago
    A couple of things that I recall. Any commercial activity was severely frowned upon. No adds, promotion, etc. Anyone remember the "Green Card Lawyer"?[1] Raised quite a stink with his spamming usenet for business. And I recall there being rumors of anonymous ftp sites containing pornography. But word was such a site couldn't exist as it would immediately swamped with so much traffic that it would be shut down. Times have changed...

    [1] https://www.wired.com/1999/04/the-spam-that-started-it-all/

  • jancsika 1901 days ago
    The reliability question is difficult to answer as the current internet includes a lot of the information that was available in the early forms.

    So with the current internet you get access to those RFCs, much usenet and mailing list content from early days, and videos of people from that era reliably recounting how the network operated. Plus all the benefits of things like Stackoverflow, Wikipedia, and others that give more context than you could get solely from the early internet.

    However, the edges of the network weren't weaponized as they are today. So there was probably less likelihood of an early internet user coming away as an anti-vaxxer/flat-earther.

    • grkvlt 1899 days ago
      Actually, there were plenty of anti-vaxxers on the early Net, as I recall - Look up some of the Sun vs. DEC vs. IBM vs. SGI vs. ... holy wars! ;)
  • paulcole 1901 days ago
    Been online over 20 years now. It’s much better today than it ever was. I can buy, watch, read, listen to whatever I want, all for a relatively small amount of money. People romanticize what the Internet was and IMO it wasn’t that great.
    • tom_ 1901 days ago
      I agree. The internet today is fast, cheap, pervasive, and well-supported. We have Google, GitHub and YouTube. What is not to like?

      I missed Usenet at one point, but I've come to find HN/Reddit/Twitter/web forums have filled that gap, from my point of view at least. HN/Reddit/web forums are quite similar in many respects, and while the UX is quite different, over time I've come not to mind, and in some ways to even prefer it.

      (Twitter? - well, it is not really much like Usenet at all, is it? But it is a place where I've found myself finding out about new stuff, and found myself amused by seeing people write performatively, and it reminds me of Usenet on that basis.)

    • timbit42 1901 days ago
      Newb.
  • hnick 1901 days ago
    Speaking of corporations: I was a teenager in the mid-90s and one thing that has stuck in my memory is a Coca-Cola truck. It had a website address on it. I'd been using the internet for a few years, but had never seen that happen before. The website probably existed but until now they'd felt no need to let anyone know.

    I was too young to think about what it might mean in the long run, but it hinted that perhaps it wouldn't just stay a nerd's playground forever. It felt like a form of validation, that this internet thing would now become mainstream, and it definitely did in the lead-up to 2000 and all that happened.

    • jaxn 1901 days ago
      That's funny. The first thing I searched to try "I'm feeling lucky" when Google came out was coca-cola (probably searched "coke")
  • SeattleCpp 1892 days ago
    I was on USENET, an ancestor of the internet, in 1981. I knew the personal names of all hundred or so people who posted to USENET news groups. There was a newsgroup called net.general for discussion of anything at all. The average I.Q. of posters was probably 130+. There was political debate, but it was all thoughtful.

    In those days, you knew the topology of USENET, so if you wanted to send mail to a person outside of your system, you described the route that reached this person. It wasn't as hard as it sounds, because there were certain systems that had an immense number of connections.

  • classichasclass 1901 days ago
    I don't know about purest form but in 1993 when I first got access it was Gopher, email, MUDs, NNTP and IRC. Lots of different clients for different protocols. Anonymous FTP was how you got your stuff. Lots of Telnet (things like MUDs and library systems in particular). Very few ads. Images were something you actively sought out to download. Websites were new, relatively unusual and mostly text. Veronica seemed to be down all the time. No one worried that anyone else could see what you were doing, and most of the time, nobody cared.

    That last is what I miss the most.

  • trixie_ 1901 days ago
    I can speak of the internet in 94. It was pretty inaccessible and/or unknown by most people. Most people paid like 20 a month for walled garden services like aol/compserve/prodigy which had no internet access only access to their internal services. Real internet access when it was available to me near Boston was like $30 a month for 20 hours (dialup) or you could get a shell account unlimited for $20 a month. Needless to say I had a shell account for awhile so IRC, muds, lynx, etc.. Lots more memories but I gotta go, maybe later :P
  • Tempest1981 1901 days ago
    There was UUCP email, where you had to know the path of hostnames to route the mail. No FQDNs! Just a list of hostnames separated by "!"

    Example from [0]: "User barbox!user would generally publish their UUCP email address in a form such as …!bigsite!foovax!barbox!user."

    You had to learn how machines were connected, and which were high capacity. Otherwise, delivery might take days, or fail.

    [0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/UUCP#Mail_routing

  • whistlerbrk 1901 days ago
    I miss a lot of it. You could build a vibrant community without bizops, marketing, partnerships, and a whole host of other people because you could generate meaningful traffic from search engines.
  • WalterBright 1901 days ago
    I put a hard disk in my original IBM PC in the 1980s and ran it as an RBBS system supporting Datalight/Zortech C for many years.

    I still have the disk drive, but no way to read it anymore.

  • sys_64738 1901 days ago
    The first commercial productization of the internet I recall is the big book of email addresses. That book was a list of email addresses and nothing else. I think it cost 30 quid. I was in it!
  • pknerd 1901 days ago
    I started using the Internet in 1996 when It got introduced in my university. Like many, I also got introduced with Netscape and IRC(mIRC). It was really fun. IRC used to make new friends. Especially from my part of the world(Pakistan), talking with people in West was a fun experiment. IE3 was new but Netscape(3.x?) was way faster and helped to load images much better on 14.4 Zoltrix modems.

    I still miss that Internet which was not manipulated by Algorithms and where even Ads were not irritating.

  • kowdermeister 1900 days ago
    I've read many comments here about not finding these sites anymore or that the 90`s web is gone. It's not the case. Remember directories and Dmoz in particular? It's closed now, but it was the gateway for many. It was so influential that it had a huge impact on your Google ranking if your site get listed there because of its crazy high PageRank.

    Anyways, here's a backup with 3,573,022 sites

    http://dmozlive.com/

  • djhaskin987 1901 days ago
    Much of it still survives -- freenode.net IRC, instant messaging, email, independent blogs, domestic and overseas message boards. It's just that back then that's all we relied on. Nowadays many people may or may not check their email, but they always check their Facebook page. Lots of them browse it on a device which listens in on their conversations and monitors practically everything they type (Android). I myself am typing this on an Android.
  • paulie_a 1901 days ago
    A lot of pointlessness and novelty. People arguing on forums. Genuinely good info. Oh and piracy and copyright infringement. So basically nothing has changed.
  • DanBC 1901 days ago
    You've asked about "The Internet". But in the early years there was a mish-mash of local BBC, national BBS, things like FIDOnet (and off-line email readers such as Bluewave), online services like Compuserve or Prodigy or AOL[1], and then Internet if you had access.

    One thing that hasn't been mentioned in the eye watering cost of getting online.

    In 1988 Compuserve was charging $11 per hour - about $22 per hour today.

  • ebcase 1898 days ago
    The Cuckoo's Egg by Cliff Stoll does a great (and entertaining) job of showing what the Internet was like early on:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cuckoo%27s_Egg

    Telnet, academic connectivity, military networks, international intrigue and espionage, UC Berkeley hippy/nerd culture -- it's a fun read.

  • Illniyar 1901 days ago
    Like most things are before corporations get involved - a hobby.

    That is - it was filled with people who were excited about it and dedicated their time for free to help other enthusiasts and grow the community. It was filled with character and personal content.

    It was also hard to use for people who aren't part of a dedicated group and it's utility was limited to the needs those group had and could provide for to others.

  • jotm 1901 days ago
    Same as now but with fewer "normies" (for lack of a better word), and corporations had no interest in investing a lot of money.
  • pknerd 1901 days ago
    There was no CSS, no React, VU or Angular. You could just publish whatever you wanted to without worrying about styles and analytics.
  • warp_factor 1901 days ago
    It was the best of times. Internet was very technical and you had to know your ways around.

    People created websites without any specific goals.

    Today, I became very cynical about the state of Internet. The big $$ companies took it over. people use it as a way to market themselves.

    It went as a fun technology for geeks that the masses made fun of. The arrival of the masses changed everything.

  • jhallenworld 1900 days ago
    In a word, USENET.

    It's still alive today, to get a feel check out sci.electronics.design (which is a still active newsgroup - Winfield Hill still posts to it):

    https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/sci.electronics.desi...

  • Waterluvian 1901 days ago
    Born in 86 so my memory of the web was the late 90s and early 00s.

    There's a magic I can't describe well. Part of it is surely nostalgia. But there was something magical about staying up in the wee hours of the night while the world around you was asleep and exploring the web. Finding new people, new ideas, new Java applet games.

  • haolez 1901 days ago
    One negative aspect of yesterday’s web was bad links and lost pages. Since the web relied a lot in users and small businesses to host their own pages, it was common to lose content if its owner lost interest.

    The social aspect was different. Only a few people had an online presence, but the engagement felt more real.

  • destitude 1901 days ago
    Was in college in early 90's and remember being on an email list that everyone used to announce creation of a new website. Most striking thing from today and back then is it was all highly educated people using the internet and it was very friendly and open to sharing and discussing ideas.
  • neverminder 1900 days ago
    Yeah, feeling nostalgic about it. No censorship, no politics, none of that bullshit. IRC served the purpose of facebook, reddit and match.com combined. Communities like Rogue Science that today would be the worst nightmare of certain 3 letter agencies. One word to describe that era: freedom.
  • refurb 1901 days ago
    Very user unfriendly compared to today, but that made discovering things fun.

    Frequented BBSs as a teenager, then heard about the internet. Joined local ISP in 1993 or so.

    Usenet was huge and the content had a much better signal to noise ratio. Lots of academics and students online, so generally intelligent discourse.

  • sbfeibish 1901 days ago
    I only knew of the internet through what was said at management meetings at a Palo Alto research institute circa 1988. They wanted to send documents back and forth between the research institute and universities. I believe it was titled "Technology Transfer".
  • ykevinator 1901 days ago
    I used mosaic in 1994. It was bad and good. It was good because it was authentic. It was bad because it was low fidelity but lots and lots of great information. The post corporate Internet is definitely better. It's a good example of a well regulated free market.
  • ridgeguy 1900 days ago
    It was very cool. I remember sometime in 2001 when iTunes was released, I was able to listen to other peoples' music libraries without restriction.

    That got shut down pretty fast, but I still remember it fondly as a thing from before the net became all about monetization.

  • CuriousSkeptic 1900 days ago
    Not really about the internet as such. But do checkout the book “Masters of Deception: The Gang That Ruled Cyberspace”

    IIRC it does a wonderful job of capturing the cyberpunk feel of growing up with it.

  • franze 1901 days ago
    Frustrating. IE6 had a marketshare of 95%+ (the rest was IE5.5 and IE5), we saw what was possible, but we could not deploy it to production as we had to fix IE6 bugs.

    Not everything was better then.

    • protomyth 1901 days ago
      I think IE6 belongs to the corporate era.
  • jmickey 1901 days ago
    This is still my favourite website from those days - https://hamsterrepublic.com/ :)
  • fghtr 1899 days ago
    I guess you can enjoy a similar situation in I2P today: https://geti2p.net
  • dawhizkid 1901 days ago
    In elementary school I remember the dancing hamsters.
  • koonsolo 1900 days ago
    I remember when Google first became popular, I challenged my friends to find a search term that did not have a porn result in the top 10 results.

    They failed.

  • mancerayder 1901 days ago
    It depends by how strictly you mean that "corporations got their hands on it," but to summarize my experience:

    Before, you went to stuff. Now stuff comes to you.

    I started off in the BBS world in the early 90's, with Internet being something available to universities and sometimes high schools. As it turns out, I lived in a university town at one point.

    The BBS world had a higher bar of entry, so it tended to attract people of higher IQ, miscreants, or tech nerds. I was the writing tech nerd (which hasn't changed, as I type here unironically). The intermediate between the Internet and the BBS messaging world was something like FIDONet, where your BBS would dial up and bulk import and export messages. Those of us who didn't have access (or know about) Usenet early on.

    The WWW killed the BBS.

    Prodigy and CompuServe and Sierra Online among others were something like hybrids, since they offered glorious (at the time) online worlds before they started weaving in the Internet like Prodigy did (my first e-mail experience). For example, you'd log in and read the news or play games, before the Internet connected itself to Prodigy.

    The early commercialized WWW was flat HTML, with flashy purple and popup-y things of a dubious nature all over the place. You had to be careful that your parents didn't click on something mean that installed something horrific on their Windows 98 PC's. On the other hand, You Went To Stuff. So while things like Yahoo and Webcrawler (was that the name of the browser) were nothing compared to Google, we didn't have a corruption of advertising manipulating search results on a grand scale (pay to play).

    Today, we live increasingly in a world where Stuff Comes To You. For example, there's a tightening of the screws of not just Google, but also sites (and especially, especially Apps) like YouTube, Amazon and others that try to use magic to 'guess' what you will like algorithmically.

    Let's stop for a second: is it in your interests for them (the corporations) to guess what you want, or is it in the interest of profit-motivated interests? And if they ALWAYS 'guess what you want' at what point does 'what you want' become self-referential? And what someone else wants you to want? How long are they guessing what you want before what you want isn't being expressed by you anymore very much? And what about your young kids, how in the world can kids even want stuff from scratch without being manipulated by the 'what do they want'-type offerings provided by algorithms?

    I deeply miss being able to "Go To Stuff" without corrupted and manipulated search results, and I think a lot of younger people don't realize how much Stuff Goes to Them. Sure, Facebook and Instagram are obviously doing it, but there's something about the re-training of the human mind going on, here.

    I will stop before conspiracy theories get out of hand and I need a drink.

  • nostrademons 1901 days ago
    I first got online in 1993, which is pretty far from the beginning of the Internet, which technically started as ARPANET in 1967. It was definitely the early-adopter phase for the WWW, but the WWW is a relatively late development for the Internet.

    1993-1995: Mostly scientific & technical papers & discussions. Deeply intellectual, with almost everyone on the Internet having a professional background and many being top experts in their fields. The WWW was a relatively minor protocol on the Internet; much discussion still happened over E-mail, Usenet, and Gopher, and Telnet and FTP had as many sites up as the WWW. (Although fact-checking my memory, apparently AOL opened up Internet access in September 1993 and that was the beginning of an influx of kids - like myself - onto the Internet, which is what started degrading the Internet.)

    1995-1998: AOL's Internet access was in full swing, Yahoo and Geocities were founded, the trivial "fun" usages of the Internet started to overshadow the scientific & technical ones. This was the era of WebRings, Geocities pages, <blink> tags, garish colors, and sites that looked like they were made by a 12-year-old because they probably were. Lot of band pages, fan pages, joke sites, and trivial pop culture. First Internet advertisements started to appear.

    1998-2000: Dot-com boom heyday. Peak gold rush. The dot-com boom is normally dated from 1995-2000, but it massively accelerated in 1998 after the Amazon & E-bay IPOs, resolution of the Asian Financial Crisis, and drop in interest rates. This was the era when VCs were throwing hundreds of millions of dollars at ideas on napkins and then taking them public 3 months later. Most activity was centered around E-commerce, where the belief was that an online version of every retail sector would take over and dominate (which turned out to be true, but happened 20 years later with Amazon).

    2001-2004: Dot-com bust. Many pundits declared the Internet over, though anyone looking around could see that wasn't the case. Most of the big VC-funded companies founded in 1998-2000 went bankrupt, thousands of people lost their jobs, many people get out of the field entirely. People talk about how all software engineering jobs will be outsourced to India. Microsoft "wins" the browser wars with IE6, and also has heavy adoption in the server (NT Server + IIS), database (SQL Server), and programming framework (ASP.NET) areas. Enterprises start moving their software to the browser. Consumer attention is largely focused on P2P filesharing (Napster, Kazaa, Gnutella, Audiogalaxy, etc.) and on early proto-social-networks (Xanga, LiveJournal, EZBoards, 4chan, Friendster, MySpace).

    2004-2008: Social networking boom and return of Web 2.0. Facebook kicks it off in 2004, along with the acquisitions of Blogger, Flickr, and Del.icio.us (all of which had been steadily building throughout the bust) and then in rapid succession we get Digg, Reddit, YouTube, and Twitter. At this point the corporation names start getting recognizable, so I'll stop there.

    • JohnHammersley 1900 days ago
      Thanks for this summary -- I read through the other comments on this Ask HN and was surprised that this one wasn't higher up; it strikes a nice balance between covering a good portion of the timeline whilst staying at a high level. Made me specifically look it up again when logged in so I could upvote it :)
    • paulie_a 1901 days ago
      I loved 98-2000. I went to a trade conference and saw a sales pitch with a guy escaping a straight jack a while riding a unicycle giving the technical details of the product.

      I snagged a badge that said I was a venture capitalist. I was probably 17 looking like a 14 year old. People pitched me before realizing I probably wasn't VC. They saw the badge first. It was a great time to see the absurdity before the crash.

      Hell I was able to get a million dollar license to some security software there. Which I promptly uploaded to IRC.

      That era was epic.

  • salgernon 1901 days ago
    Check out telehack.com - it’s kind of a simulation / game /community. The early internet was about exploration.
  • asjo 1901 days ago
    One of the things I remember talking about back then was: how nice it would be, if everybody could be reached by email.
  • bawana 1900 days ago
    before there was profit to be made, there was no evil. people shared. everything was free, like the air is today. people could take as much as they wanted. eventually that was boring so they started giving. then they realized that giving felt good. without profit to motivate greed, people's good nature appeared.
  • j45 1901 days ago
    It felt early. It felt like choosing something unpopular, because it interested you.. At a time, computers weren't cool, no one knew what the internet was.. And then my user to the whole world arriving in your area of interest.

    A lot of firsts are memorable.. The first time using cable modem instead of dialup, the first time using wifi on a laptop and it seeming like magic.. "usable" GPRS mobile data.

    One thing that felt different was there seemed to be far more creation than there is today vs consuming. In some ways, the only way to participate was creating because there was far less to consume.

    Another memory and remaining gift today is the feeling of what authentic community and social interaction felt like online. Despite social media being ubiquitous today, there seemed a deeper community during the late 90's / early 2000's.. pre Facebook. I'd say reddit is the closest experience to the feeling today, but Reddit is more awesome with the sheer amount of people on it.

    I still have a few friendships formed from irc as teenagers and we still remain in touch nearly 15-20 years later. Maybe not as often, but the depth and respect often remains. It's not uncommon to get a random call or long email during a major life event to reconnect for a few weeks to support each other along until the next thing.

    I don't think the 90s internet generations' minds were as skewed by anxiety because they used technology to create, and connect.. not consume what others are up to, and as mainstream society has picked up the internet the consumption (gaming included) mindset has arrived in much greater numbers. The big shift from irc to instant messengers was one wave of disconnection, but when social networks started replacing words with photos.. The substance became visual instead of learning to use your words. I got to create games, music, web, mobile apps, video and web apps.

    In a way, all my friends who joined the internet 10-15 years after me are 10-15 years behind and catching up on topics like privacy, managing distractions, paying attention to how much value tech actually provides me.

    They are also going thru internet and technology addiction on a curve after I did. But we're starting to come out of the addiction cycle of building humanities weakest online social bonds of showing off, being phony, jealousy and the resulting anxiety for something far more positive: becoming creators.

    There's an interesting overlap between the group who grew up online before the world discovered the internet and saw the world arrive, and the current group that knew no life without the internet.

    I still have faith thoough.. Any young minded and open minded ppl (armed with today's possibilities have some pretty incredible opportunities if they can focus on what they're doing and not what, or how others are doing.

  • hacknat 1901 days ago
    It was great, but inaccessible to the average person.
  • jungler 1901 days ago
    I think my favorite way of describing the 90's internet(I was alive but not there for the 80's version) is that it was unfinished. Things were slow. Things broke a lot. Your computer crashed a lot. You didn't have the space to download a lot of stuff(a lot of people turned to printing out web pages). The number of venues was small enough that they could be listed(I had a 1992-era book that acted like a phone directory of all the interesting things there were to do). But there was a promise of possibility there. Once in a while, things did work. A site did what you wanted it to, seamlessly. You could go on Usenet or IRC or a MUD, and just talk to people. They were roughly as terrible as people today, but with a higher average level of income and education. You could occasionally talk to someone from a foreign country, too. Because the scale and sophistication of everything was small, there were many unlocked doors - limited or no protections. You could reasonably expect to moderate an online community on your own, and not drown in spambots, brigading, or DDOS attacks.

    But the barriers to entry were high, as well. A state-of-the-art build consistently ran in the $2000 range - you could go cheaper but it often meant being several years in the past at a moment when Moore's Law was steamrolling every assumption in 18 month cycles, and software that kept pace with more and more features. Games in particular heavily targeted the enthusiasts. Many people got into PCs upon experiencing Doom for the first time. And running a server - well, most people were on dial-up lines, and in the early part of the decade, shell accounts, not the PPP connections that gave you full TCP/IP connectivity. If you ran a server, it was most likely part of a school or business connection. And then you had to maintain all of it yourself. The onset of free hosting - first with Geocities style static HTML, and then webpage builders and even PHP scripting, was a kind of early example of Internet commercialization. It allowed lots of folks to make their own web site for the first time, which they promptly filled up with "about me: i am 13 years old and have two dogs. sorry ill finish this later"

    There were no real expectations around early Web content, after all. It was whatever you thought you needed to put there, and a consumer-branding mindset hadn't sunk in yet among Web surfers. You explored Web sites because there were no places with upvotes and newsfeeds, just pages you bookmarked and checked regularly in hopes of an update. If you wanted the drip feed of news, mailing lists and Usenet worked better. But gradually publishing and aggregation came into play on the Web, with both traditional news players and the likes of Slashdot, and web forums took up the baton from Usenet of allowing you to engage in topical discussion, except that over time all web forums turned into meta-communities defined by their off-topic discussion.

    Then as now, the single most useful thing you could do in most circumstances was to send someone an email.

  • make3 1900 days ago
    it was before Google, so stuff was really hard to find
  • karatefylla 1900 days ago
    Like the wild west.
  • rafiki6 1900 days ago
    A lot less porn...
  • crb002 1900 days ago
    It was ARPANET.
  • DoreenMichele 1900 days ago
    There was a lot of good stuff available for free, but sometimes only temporarily.

    I had internet access starting about 26 or 27 years ago, but it became much more important to me when I was living in the middle of nowhere and began homeschooling. Then it became much more central to my life.

    I was on some email lists to support my homeschooling effort. At the time, they were hosted for free by a university. The founder was an IT professional. You kind of had to be. There wasn't anything plug-and-play, like Yahoo Groups or Google Groups.

    I had access to some excellent homeschooling stuff for free via internet, but there wasn't anything like Patreon or tip jars, so they had no way to monetize it.

    One handwriting site eventually pulled it's free materials off the internet and began charging consulting fees or something. Some excellent math resource disappeared altogether. The best explanation for faceblindness that I've ever seen is now only available via The Wayback Machine aka The Internet Archive (last I checked).

    I did a free homeschooling and parenting site for a bit, but hand coding everything when I'm not a professional programmer was a huge burden and impeded updates. I eventually moved to Word Press and, later, BlogSpot. I post a great deal more content using BlogSpot.

    I'm mostly okay with the commercialization of the internet. If you want good content, it takes time, effort and expertise to put that out there. It isn't realistic to expect talented people to provide such for free forever. If you want such, you should be willing to allow them to somehow make money from it.

    I still try to provide free resources available to the public while trying to monetize it with tips and patrons. Ads aren't doing so well on the internet generally and seem to be an especially poor fit for much of my writing. I haven't yet figured out how to get adequate income from my own websites, but some people do successfully monetize their work while providing cool stuff available for free to anyone.

    I recently had a piece do well on HN in terms of traffic and comments: more than 600 upvotes, more than 300 comments and more than 60k page views.

    I'm pleased with that aspect of it, but it didn't result in any money whatsoever for me and I'm on track to be broke by the end of the day tomorrow. HN members complain bitterly about ads and are aggressive about using ad blockers. My experience has been you don't make much ad money from hitting the front page of HN and I would rather get tips and patrons anyway.

    I don't know if I did something wrong or if it is a case of "sexism is alive and well, so the world expects me to work for free even if I'm literally starving and they know it" or just what.

    People who imagine the internet was better back then or would be better if we could get rid of the corporate influence are people who literally expect everything to somehow magically be high quality, completely and totally free and also be reliably available and trustworthy with no hidden gotcha.

    I don't know if I will ever succeed in what I want to do, but it's clear to me that patronage, tips and other forms of monetization make it possible for independent creatives to pursue high minded endeavors without compromising their vision in order to pay the bills. I think that's exactly what folks imagine the internet used to be and maybe was to some degree, minus the implicit expectation of basically slave labor making it happen.

    And those things are possible thanks to commercialization of the internet. They would work better if more folks felt like it mattered to pay the people providing high quality independent content instead of bad-mouthing commercialization as if it were the root of all evil.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18842009

  • bane 1901 days ago
    I don't go back as far as some of the folks here, but I think my first ever sip of the Internet was maybe...'90 or '91? The Web had been invented but wasn't really something people used for a few more years yet.

    My first ever connection to the Internet came from a local, but large, Bulletin Board System that prided itself in lots of dial-in numbers, large file and message board collection and good FidoNet service. You could dial-in for 20 or 30 minutes a day for free and a couple hours if you paid something like $10 or $15 a month.

    At some point they thought it would be cool to provide an internet email gateway for a couple dollars more which I excitedly paid until I realized I knew literally nobody else I could possible message with.

    It's hard for modern users who didn't see the emergence of the Internet as basically the Web and highspeed always on connections. Before that time it was expensive, slow, and highly geared towards universities and whatever people could personally offer. Most of the university stuff I knew about were sites run by enthusiastic faculty or students who had found an unmonitored corner of a server somewhere on their university network and put up various interesting collections of things they had pulled together.

    Maybe around '91 or so my friend's father got a very limited usage dial-up shell account from a local ISP that dropped you into a shell for 30 minutes a day. You could use various text-only tools to send and receive email (we never did since it was a corporate account), and a couple megabytes of diskspace we could use to stage files we ftp'd down from other sites. Then we'd login over the next couple days and use most of his account time to download whatever random thing we had found somewhere.

    Gopher was also a common tool that made getting around and finding things faster, if and only if you could find a well maintained gopher site. For those not familiar with gopher, it was a bit like an easy to navigate text-only hypertext system that predated the WWW.

    I think it was in '92 that I was selected by my county to participate in a special sponsored program that would give a few students at each school a dial-up internet account on the local mainframe with 30 minutes of time per day. They had no idea at all what we'd do with it and had rigged the accounts to first drop into a school-system gopher screen. It took a few days to figure out how to kill the gopher client and get back to a shell. I think telnet and ftp were also installed and I was able to connect to various sites I knew about (and kept a little notebook with information about).

    One thing I remember distinctly, having been a heavy BBS user was not really understanding that I could connect to remote servers and it was using a different information network than the phone system to do it. What this meant was that if I dialed into a BBS in a different state or country I'd get a huge phone bill. But if I dialed into my local ISP, and then telneted to a server in a different state or country it didn't matter. That first month waiting to see if we'd get a bill for all the time I spent connecting to servers all over the world was terrifying (as was the relief when the bill didn't arrive!)

    It's important to remember that at this exact same time BBS usage was at its peak and there were several very large and competitive BBS services around: America Online (did not provide Internet Access originally), Prodigy, GEnie, CompuServe and a handful of more local offerings (like I mentioned above). We never really had the money for these services, but a few of my friends did and they were interesting in different ways, often trying to figure out how to get around the very low dial-up rates of the time (typically 1200 or 2400 baud). For example, Prodigy offered a vector-based graphical interface with nice splash screens for various games and services. It took a while to load each screen, but they charged you by the minute so they didn't care.

    At some point, the hobbyist BBS scene also tried to provide graphical interfaces. There was a handful of various client/server software setups available, often with a text-only fallback. I remember a the names of a few pieces of software, Excalibur, there was an interesting Macintosh only system I think called FirstClass that had a special transport layer protocol and so on. The reason I bring this up is that when the WWW first really started appearing it wasn't really understood that this could become "the interface to the global supernetwork" and it was just assumed that some kind of graphical interface to local systems was a natural technological evolution of BBSs and that they would continue to compliment if not dominate internet access.

    I think around '94 or '95 it started to become pretty common that you could just find an ISP in the phone book, call them up and get some kind of "getting started" software kit or a dial-up shell account. The getting started kits usually had some kind of dialing software, a TCP/IP stack (OSs didn't ship with them in general at the time), Mosaic and some kind of Email client...all on a couple of floppies! Usually with some large number of minutes of time per day your account would connect for (or a per minute charge after). People used to keep usage logs in notebooks to make sure they wouldn't blow their connection cap and either run out of internet or end up with huge monthly bills.

    The transition away from BBSs and onto the web happened very quickly after that and I think coincided neatly with the transition of MS-DOS users to Windows '95 (which didn't ship with a TCP/IP stack!). You could kind of feel BBS's start to decay right around this time as users just started moving wholesale onto the web.

    (continued)

    • bane 1901 days ago
      (part 2)

      For a long time, personal web pages were sort of the equivalent of what BBSs used to offer, but very decentralized. IRC took over for BBS Chat, ftp sites took over for local BBS file offerings and email took over for BBS mail and FidoNet -- Usenet was suddenly introduced to an entire generation of users. Except instead of whoever was the local user community of your local BBS it was some slice of technically minded people all over the planet. Most ISPs gave you a few MB to put up your own page and a few pointers on basic HTML, how to ftp, and off you went!

      There really weren't any "corporate" sites or big centralized sites at the time. So people came up with all kinds of ways to try to connect. The earliest was just people putting up links to favorite sites on their personal pages. Soon larger indexes of sites were started (and suddenly Yahoo! appeared). The other was to connect similarly themed personal sites via a "web ring".

      It still wasn't entirely obvious that the WWW would be "it" though. Many many services were started pushing their own protocol and systems to fill major technical gaps that existed at the time. Streaming video for example was pushed very heavily by RealPlayer. There was a number of experiments for "push" news clients for example.

      Oddly, I don't really remember any credible attempts at another technology that was more or less like the WWW but with unique spins or tech approaches. It seems that the core approach was so good that everybody just tried to grab it and bastardize it to their own ways early on.

      Many many small and local ISPs were started to service the growing dial-up business and the competition was awesome. I ended up work for an ISP from '96 to maybe '99. It wasn't long before unlimited dial-up became a thing. By the late 90s you could even get "free" dial-up if you used special dial-up software that filled a portion of your screen with ads. At some point I think I got a second phone line and just dialed-in 100% of the time. Always on internet was...amazing. Suddenly download managers started appearing to handle broken connections and redials and to help manage bandwidth over then 28.8kbps connections (kilo BITS per second).

      There was a huge industry change up near the end of the 90s with the advent of 56k modems. Suddenly POTs phone lines had to be of very high quality, higher than most people had. It was very common to buy a brand new 56k modem and never get the maximum of something like 53kbps (it wasn't really possible to ever get 56kbps connections for various reasons. Most people would get 40k or so, but of course it was always the mom & pop ISPs fault for not getting the giant telecom to have clean lines :/

      The desire for more speed, and the low quality of service most small ISPs could offer over 56k meant very rapid consolidation and investment in more expensive connection technologies like ISDN. When ADSL was finally announced, it was clear that the industry was going to move to a model with the phone company being the ISP and inside of a year or two almost every ISP who couldn't got out of the business.

      During all this, AOL started offering more and more internet services, but resisted just becoming an ISP. This resulted in years of eternal septembers on various message boards and other services as millions of AOL users, newly introduced to some part of the internet for the first time ever engaged in typical eternal september behaviors. Among the more technically inclined users, an @aol.com email address wasn't even worth responding to.

      At some point, maybe in the mind to late 90s, there was a concerted effort by a few pioneers to try to do business on the WWW. The technology wasn't really there for a while, and many of the efforts were weirdly skeuomorphic "online malls" and such. Very clumsy, but the technology was clumsy and web pages couldn't really be all the sophisticated. Amazon stuck it through, first as a bookstore and then they started to add more and more things. Another retailer, ThinkGeek was started in the late 90s and is still around. Most of the rest are long dead. It's interesting that both of those early "e-commerce" companies is now experimenting with brick-and-mortar stores.

      It's worth it for somebody interested to lookup old videos and screenshots (and web captures) of the just pre-internet to early internet interfaces and tools. There's at least one effort I know of that's trying to revive the Prodigy Vector Art graphics as well as a couple of the smaller graphical BBS artworks.

  • matte_black 1901 days ago
    Part of the charm about the early days of the internet for me was that I was a child and I had child-like logic about how things worked.

    My view of the internet was very skeuomorphic. Websites were like "places" and by riding the web-rings I felt like I was surfing through cyberspace. When I would come across new information I would store it in my bookmarks which I thought of as a sort of inventory. If I came across a small tribe on some random internet forum somewhere I might share some of my best links with them to win them over. If I found a guest book I would sign it as a way of planting my flag.

    I viewed anyone who actually "owned" a website to be something like a God, a MASTER of the web. I also viewed hackers as very dangerous people, where if they wanted to, they could blow up my computer in my face.

  • ArrayList 1900 days ago
    Amazing reddit post that sums up my feelings perfectly:

    "What I miss is how mysterious the internet could be and how gullible we were. The Internet felt like this strange underbelly of obscure information.

    First you're growing up in some little town and only know about Star Wars and Green Day. Then suddenly you're finding niche websites and reading about obscure movies and bands and movies you definitely won't find on the radio or in the video store. Youd find dedicated fan sites that had deleted scenes from Alien that you'd never even heard of!

    You'd find bizarre paranormal websites that every story felt so real and believable. Every low res UFO and ghost picture could be real. Every story was accepted as real. I read the Ted the Caver geocities page back then at 2 in the morning and was totally convinced it was real. Nowadays we're skeptical of every story and some photoshop guy will dissect any picture and reveal how the shadows dont fall right or something.

    If you could find the right program and file, you could download pretty much any Nintendo game ever! Your tiny world and library of just Mario and Ninja Gaiden completely exploded with potential. I was now able to play this holy grail Chrono Trigger I'd always heard of. Or I would go through great lengths to find a good English patch of this Japanese only game called Front Mission. And you'd convince yourself that you weren't stealing because Nintendo hadn't sold these games for years, they were unobtainable! You felt like a hacker and a pirate doing that stuff.

    The internet back then made you feel like an explorer on the fringe. The mysterious frontier just waiting for you to engage its endless opportunity. Man I miss that shit."

    permalink/original: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/980rrc/what_do_y...

  • aaronscat 1900 days ago
    Reminds me of this. There was a time when this was true and nobody knew or cared who you were. https://aaronscat.com/blog/on-the-internet-nobody-knows-you-...
  • charliebrownau 1900 days ago
    Is the real issue that companies, goverments and coprorations and nomries are finally using the internet

    or the REAL ISSUE

    is Companies now in 2015-2020 are based on POLITICAL AGENDA first and not making money first

  • ArrayList 1898 days ago
    Does anyone, ANYONE remember Fat Cat Café? With the "Fat Cat Chatrooms?" This is likely very early 2000s.
  • greatamerican 1900 days ago
    It sucked! Absolutely nothing worked.
  • OnlyRepliesToBS 1900 days ago
    this opinion has been removed.
  • charliebrownau 1900 days ago
    Gday Platforms that censor speech List :-

    * Facebook

    * Twitter

    * Google

    * Youtube

    * TUMBLR

    * Pateron

    * Stripe

    * Paypal

    * Twitch

    * Spotify

    * Apple

    * pin interest

    * LinkedIn

    * Mailchimp

    * Wordpress

    * mastodon

    * azure

    * Mastercard

    * Godaddy

    * MEDIUM

    * Shopify

    * Cloudflare

    * pusher

    * WIKI

    * Reddit

    * teespring

    * Slack

    * coinbase

    * GOFUNDME

    * VISA

    * Square

    * Bitpay