If you are in your late thirties to mid-forties right now, there is a good chance that you have spent most of your life in a cycle of making some sort of home on the internet only to have it crumble beneath you like chalk and having to start over.
@evacide i miss the time when my home was irc and usenet
@mark
@evacide mine still is irc! It survives in dark corners :)

both of those places still exist and are active @mark @evacide

Your "homes on the internet"( in those two examples) didn't crumble,  you just left home.

Maybe it's time to revisit them 😀

@krejgo @mark @evacide every time I have tried usenet over the last 20 years it's all been piracy and spam.
@draeath @krejgo @mark @evacide Spraking of piracy, through about 2006-2007 I was able to use Usenet for serious discussions of pirate radio transmitter design and operation.

@krejgo @mark @evacide Re: Usenet: I went there, I saw, I stayed a while, and I fucked off.

There’s probably a reason Mark did, too. #lang_en

@mark @evacide My home is still irc. Usenet on the other hand :( I miss that

@gullevek @mark @evacide Lately I've filled my irc niche with the local #meshcore community. Low reliability, low bandwidth, mostly "test" messages, but it's got that, je ne sais quoi, nerd roost vibe I guess.

(I still miss #initgame.)

@ozdreaming @mark @evacide The nice thing about my irc life is that there are still the same people there that where there more than 30
Years ago
@evacide keep the chalk for the inevitable indigestion
@evacide There was a shooting more or less in my vicinity today. My first reaction was to long for the days when a simple text search on Twitter would have been enough to figure what was going on.
@marielgm @evacide absolutely. I miss local news and perspectives massively. That and being able to get some fucking customer service from actual people at shitty companies. People power.
@noodlemaz A time when yelling at politicians felt fun AND productive
@marielgm @evacide I think it would be nifty if we could geotag our Fediverse posts and thus be able to find recent posts near me (chronological posts within a fixed distance). Would bring back that concept, albeit not as widespread as Twitter was.

@ClickyMcTicker @marielgm @evacide

You kind of get that at a coarse level by joining a geographically local instance if one exists

@gbargoud @ClickyMcTicker IMO the beauty of Twitter was its text searchability and old chronological feed organization, no need for geolocation data. I don't think Mastodon has to /could be what Twitter used to be. But I still miss it

@gbargoud
> You kind of get that at a coarse level by joining a geographically local instance if one exists

... or if it doesn't, by helping to start one, and recruiting locals to set up accounts there, even if only to post about local stuff. Ideally including public organisations and media outlets.

Toot.wales and their Tŵt Cymru is a great Proof of Concept for what can be done.

@ClickyMcTicker @marielgm @evacide

Fedimap.de

Fedimap is a reallife usermap of the Fediverse.

Fedimap.de

@marielgm @evacide

I found out about Melissa Hortman and her family's murders on the fediverse before mainstream news picked it up. Reminded me of when I was learning about Ferguson back in the day.

@evacide usenet (which probably betrays my age)

@nxskok @evacide

Usenet and Multics forums for me

Gods how I still miss Multics forums...

@nxskok @evacide
usenet too, where I was too afraid to go to irl meets till I was ~17/18 - people were shocked, they thought I was 30+… ironically - now, when I’m 30++ - I write like im 12;)
@evacide Letting big tech companies host and own your accounts was a mistake. In the early days we hosted our own stuff, our own websites, email, etc.. We need to go back to that. Not your keys, not your home.

@wayubi
> Letting big tech companies host and own your accounts was a mistake

Agreed.

> In the early days we hosted our own stuff, our own websites, email, etc

This is a common legend, not entirely true. It was quite normal in the 1990s to trust hosting of email, etc, to institutions with which we had a direct relationship; universities, ISPs, etc. The move to hosting by faceless platforms like Yahoo, Hotmail, EGroups, etc, began in the late 1990s, as the DotCom bubble inflated.

@evacide

@strypey @evacide I used to host my own stuff on bluehost and geocities before that when I was still in my teens

(1/2)

@wayubi
> I used to host my own stuff on bluehost and geocities

Good for you. I had a website in the late 1990s on Orcon's gratis hosting, which I made using NVu and uploaded over FTP with Filezilla. But this style of self-hosting wasn't universal ever. As I say community-hosting by a trusted org was just as common, if not more common.

@evacide

@strypey @evacide it was a lot more common before MySpace, blogger, flickr and that sort of thing. I'm sorry your memory is failing you, it happens with age.

@wayubi
> I'm sorry your memory is failing you, it happens with age

I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt, and presume that was intended as light-hearted humour. But FYI that kind of joke doesn't always land when posting in a text-only medium, or when talking to strangers, and especially when you're doing both.

@evacide

@wayubi
> I'm sorry your memory is failing you, it happens with age.
That sort of snarky remarks belong on X, not Mastodon…

If this was Lemmy or reddit, I'd downvote your comment. There was no need for it. Let's try to keep things friendly here?

@strypey @evacide

@aerion @strypey @evacide Hide your drugs, the Mastodon police is here. 🚨

@wayubi
OK, you're blocked. This sort of attitude is NOT welcome here.

@strypey @evacide

@aerion
> OK, you're blocked. This sort of attitude is NOT welcome here

Just out of curiosity, why a Block rather than just a Mute?

(2/2)

It's akin to the way obtain veges. It's true we haven't always relied on corporations to supply them. Some people still grow their own, and it's true that a generation ago more of us did that. But even then, plenty of people got at least some of our veges from local greengrocers, farners markets, and small, locally-owned supermarkets.

Some of us are lucky enough to still have such things, and increasing the availability of them is just as valid as a way of de-corporatising vege supply.

@wayubi
Strictly speaking, Geocities wasn't self-hosting.
@strypey @evacide
@aerion @strypey @evacide Strictly speaking, neither are any of the self hosting services in existence (or the domain resolution services you need to drive traffic there), but it's understood that your own code uploaded to a web server via ftp counts as self hosting, and not everyone has a stick up their ass.
@evacide is that old enough to have had a geocities page? 😊
I still kind of feel like the idea that we would all have "homepages" linked together by common interests and spontaneous social networking was one of our better ones. Fediverse is pretty cool too though...

@adaroc @evacide

webrings and banner links and pixel icons to show off our fandoms!

+ coding in little workarounds to circumvent Geocities ads. XD

@adaroc @evacide We have https://neocities.org/ now! I am still active in IRC, and the Fediverse is a cosy place to be, too. I miss StudiVZ a bit, and these small creative forums for everything.
Neocities

Create and surf awesome websites for free.

@Mecrisp
> I miss StudiVZ a bit, and these small creative forums for everything

Hopefully more people make use of Lemmy, MBin, nodeBB, Discourse (+AP plugin), PieFed, and other forum-style apps that can now be part of the fediverse too.

@adaroc @evacide