Bit of online history:

Ziff-Davis was a publisher of magazines, mostly about photography, then computers when they came along. They ran some groups on CompuServe and other pre-Internet online services.

Recognizing that online experiences would be the Next Big Thing, and also having learned that the existing options like Prodigy sucked, Z-D embarked on a huge project to invent something new.

It used SGML, which became the parent of HTML.

It used stylesheets.

It used multitasking before Windows really could do it.

It used TCP/IP before Microsoft supported it.

It was not only going to host Z-D magazines, but also the Washington Post, the Star Tribune (Minneapolis), Gartner Group, and I think also some Connecticut newspapers. All paid content.

It was gorgeous, packed full of great ideas and great design work and custom fonts and offline functionality and ....

While Interchange was struggling with bugs and late delivery and servers that weren't up to snuff, the World Wide Web came along.

The Web was pathetic by comparison. Barely supported images and the simplest layout. No fonts. No forums, subscribeable packages, automated downloads, etc.

But the Web was open, free, and it worked. Unlike buggy Interchange.

Boom. In a matter of months it was over.

@online-news

@steve
Cool! I haven't seen an Interchange disk set since the mid 90s. Are these your disks, and do the files on them exist anywhere other than on these disks?

@spike Those are my disks but I have no idea where they are. I had a complete set of beta disks, too, but none of that will install/run without Windows 3.1 ... and a complete VMS server backend. It barely ran.

We had a fish tank in the online department with two goldfishes. One was named IC1 (same as the Interchange executable). The other was named GPF (General Protection Fault).

They both died.

@steve I volunteer at a lab at CU Boulder called @mediaarchaeologylab and would be really interested to learn more about this platform. If you know anyone who might still have access to any of those materials, I'd be interested to see if we could fire it back up again. (Among other things, I do a lot of work making archaic operating systems available and functional, so it would be an interesting experiment to see if it could be brought out of suspended animation, even for a little while)

Goldfishes die, but media seems to persist much longer than its best-by date.