What was your earliest experiences with the Internet like? +
What was your earliest experiences with the Internet like? +
Omg I forgot about the letters. Also made me remember those characters you could customize with clothes and backgrounds and stuff. I guess the prequel to bitmojis but they were like, edgy and cool.
If anyone remembers what I’m talking about can you remind me the name?
It was the mid-90s, and just a shell account. Gopher, archie, pine and zmodem.
We didn’t get PPP access for a year or two; this was the days before google - yahoo, altavista, some other engines I can’t remember, and metasearch engines like dogpile that would query a bunch of different search engines and return the combined set of results.
This was the days of mailing lists and usenet for the most part - connect up, download messages for like an hour, then log off, read and reply, then log on and send.
I was there for the original hamsterdance, and it ruled.
Day of defeat on steam with a download speed of 56k modem… Took like 4 hours for nearly 700mb? And oh my, was it worth it !
ICQ for instant messages !
We took a class field trip to a students parents facility where they made supplements. They showed us a computer connected to university databases of research papers. Up until that point we called BBS servers directly and would rush to download everything before sometime accidentally picked up the phone. This was the early 90s
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_HiNote
The next year I got my first laptop and a 14.4baud us robotics pcmcia card.
2nd hand.
Connecting to a text only BBS at 300 baud who got their content from the internet.
MSN IM was really popular. I remember it felt really funny to come home and talk to your friends you had just seen.
StumbleUpon was also really cool before it was sold to ebay. It’s how I found cgsociety, but then the website owner shut the site down for some reason and everyone migrated to artstation.
There were also the video games on YTV’s website, and all the other flash games that are hard to find now. Prime among them in my memory was the 3-d missile game. You would guide a missile through a series of spinning obstacles as the missile accelerated. Newgrounds, ebaums world, the original youtube that wasn’t entirely focused on profit yet…
I don’t remember using napster, but I did use Limewire until it shutdown. It was really cool to have access to so much music but IIRC it was mostly mp3’s of a single song and sometimes it wouldn’t even be the full song.
I also spent a lot of time playing tower defence maps on Starcraft Battle.net, then it started to be over-run by spam bots and no one played anymore. It was really sad to see that happen, and eye-opening for me when no one at blizzard or whoever controlled battlenet did anything about it. Looking back, that was likely a large part of the reason for my eventual to switch to linux.
Grab a 4 free AOL disk from blockbuster, use 3 of them as frisbees. Take the last one home and spend 10 minutes waiting the interface to install. Plug in the phone line and hear a series of beeps and schreeches before being greeted by an early robotic voice saying “welcome!” And often “you’ve got mail”.
Afterwards you follow a guide to sign up for a mail account and a text like document with links to AOL platform tooling like chat rooms and search tools. You started looking for urls everywhere wondering what hidden gems you’ll find in the virtual world and what kind of content was on cereal websites or Nickelodeon. There was a massive learning curve for multimedia, but you had a lot of pen pals from chatrooms. So much porn spam. Nabisco had an awesome gaming site
I dialed into the local university’s phone bank and could access fun stuff like… Kermit and Gopher. It was cool in the sense that I could read words in someone else’s computer, but content was really sparse, so mostly I hit the outbound network in another city to but porn BBSs that weren’t local calls for me.
Eventually I discovered IRC and trivia. And then they invented WWW and DSL and it started to explode.
And now it’s all commercialized garbage. I wonder if the internet would’ve held so much fascination for me if I’d known it would become a tool to view constant advertisements like a brainwash machine in Clockwork Orange.
I guess my very first exposure was my brother letting me use his university account over dialup. You really had to know your way around in those days or know someone who did. He showed me how I could go to umich (U. of Michigan) and a few other places that ran public ftp servers full of games!
Then I landed a job at a small company which had accounts on CompuServe. Around this time at home, I was playing MUDs a lot on a free local BBS, and at some point, the people running the BBS decided to have a go at becoming the first commercial ISP in town. (They’re still around, in fact!)
So I approached work about opening an Internet account, arguing that it was way cheaper than CompuServe. They reluctantly agreed. I was over the Moon but my superiors were not super impressed at first. They complained that they couldn’t find anything while CompuServe was much better organized. I eventually found Yahoo which, at the time, had a sort of CompuServe-ish vibe of providing this directory that categorized most of the more popular sites by topic and that placated them. You have to remember this was long before search engines and even the www itself was still in its infancy.
I was having a blast, discovering something new every week. Usenet was so cool when I learned about that! And I found out about some sort of MIDI file format with embedded instrument samples you could play to get electronic music in a super compact format long before broadband made mp3s the way to go. What were they called again? Soundtrack files? Something like that. I played them all the time while I was coding.
Mod files played with tracker software. They were awesome at the time (and still are).
@solarvalleys Definitely AOL chat rooms. But also figuring out how to use Netscape Navigator and search for things using a seach engine called Hotbot. And teaching myself how to build entire websites on notepad.
It was neat to see things evolve fast. Examples: AOL sent these loss leader free offers to grow their network, it gave you free time to try the service and was an installer package that came in the physical mail as little cartidges. A short time later as CDs (the precursor to DVDs), with even more time. It rapidly went from “90 minutes free, wow!” to “600 hours free, wow!” and they went from people coveting them to just piling up everywhere and getting upcycled around the house. 🤣 “Honey hand me one of those 3000 hours coasters for my drink”.
Or how fast web development went. I remember how excited we were for hotdog pro, where the html tags had *colors* and you could push *buttons* to add tags! A short time later “Hey Netobjects Fusion just stick this graphic here somewhere, i dunno you figure it out, use a dozen nested tables with a single clear pixel in each cell, kthx”
Man now that I think about it, the frequency that businesses and organizations had the word “hot” in their brand name back then was another thing lmao. Hotdog, Hotmail, Hotbot, and I know I’m forgetting some other ones. Because the internet was HOT my friends! 🔥
Errghhh ooo oo uh uh oh uh uh.
Dial up
building websites on GeoCities. I had one that had “haxing tools” and how to use them. the different phreaking boxes and how to make them. etc.
around the same time I was war driving phone numbers and telnetting into whatever I connected to.
I found an unprotected early porn site with questionable content. I deleted their entire server.
I stopped doing it when I accidentally connected to a state police server.
skip forward a few years and I was on Napster, Limewire, a couple others I can’t remember now.
skip forward a few more years and I was hosting my own online forums and websites.
few more years I was hosting VPN’d LAN’s for Xbox tournaments between friends when we couldn’t get together(this was long before xlink kai). the lag was terrible sometimes, but made for some epic kills.
now I’m a full stack software developer and get paid to build and break shit.
Kinda limited, in the sense that I didn’t have my own computer until about 2006 and just had a “family” PC before then, which my brother and dad used.
One of my earliest memories from the late 90’s (I would have been about 8 years old) was making a website on MaxPages, which was one of those build-your-own-website services. Mine listed video game cheats and passcodes. I didn’t have much time to add to my page as my computer skills were limited and I didn’t get much time on the computer, so I got bad reviews just for not having much content. Some asshole on one of their public chatrooms hacked my account and defaced my site a few weeks later.
For reasons I’d rather not go into, I had a more limited exposure to Flash games and didn’t really get involved with Newgrounds until my late teens. Cartoon Network (at least the US/Canada site) used to have a great selection of Flash games though.
Got dialup as a young teen in the 90s - first with CompuServe, then usenet and the early Web. Usenet was amazing, fun communities, kibology, and great for dialup, and as someone who lives in the country, I still wish sites had more options for downloading stuff in advance to view when out of signal.
A less positive part of usenet was back then it was completely uncensored (or at least, that child me had unrestricted access) . At the time I thought it was normal and good to be able to get porn with people my age, instead of weird adults. But now I feel pretty sad and icky that this was my introduction to sex, and horrible if I think abiut the situations behind those pictures.
Not being able to get online because my dad was using the internet at a wholly different location for work.
Also the screams of a dialup modem through the tinny speakers of a first-gen, puck-moused iMac.
Gotta find the Netscape disk. Gotta get mom off the phone. Gotta wait 5 minutes for the space jam website to load.
Getting booted from your game because Mom got a phone call.
720p video was a straight up luxury that most of us didn’t bother with because it took way too long to buffer lol.
It was a very different time.
Absolutely no way my parents would have let me on a chat room with random people before maybe middle school or highschool because they’d be worried about their autistic son. So I never got to experience them since by the time I was old enough, chat rooms were dying to macrohard controlled skype.
Early yt was definitely a wild west from my hazy memories. Definitely a much more free and friendly time for the content you could make and language you could use.
At home it was 28.8k dial-up (but my PC came without a modem, or a sound card or CD drive come to think of it, so I installed one myself), and Compuserve from 1993. Before that, dial-up BBS run by a hobbyist. Compuserve was great and the discussion forums in particular were fun, not unlike Lemmy.
At work, X400 email on a DOS PC. That was maybe around the very end of the '80s or early '90s. It seemed like science fiction, and very few people in business had email at the time so it wasn’t really very useful.