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“Computer Rooms”: People Share Things Only Old-Internet OG’s Remember (45 Answers)

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Unlike Gen Z kids, we Millennials never had Snapchat, our own smartphones, and 5G. We grew up with chat rooms, one PC per family, and dial-up internet. The early days of the Internet are starting to feel like something ancient, but the World Wide Web actually began in 1989. AOL and IRC were all the rage in the late ’80s, which makes them more than 30 years old.

The years of the early Internet had a lot of interesting phenomena. That’s why one Redditor decided to ask fellow Internet veterans: “What’s something ancient that only an Internet veteran would remember?” Mine is probably the old-school message boards, specifically the Dragon Ball Z-related ones. If there are any Internet veterans out here, let us know your picks!

Google not existing

Netscape Navigator

Excite, HotBot, Lycos, Altavista, Webcrawler

Amazon is just an online bookstore

IRC

ICQ, AIM, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, Trillian

Yahoo Chatrooms

Yahoo Games

Usenet

AOL

CompuServe

Prodigy

NetZero

Edit: More below:

As u/TheOCDGeek reminded me, Juno (free email and later free internet). There were a ton of free internet services (dial-up) for a while. Most were backed by one company that I can’t remember the name of.

About.com

Ask Jeeves

Metacrawler (get results from many search engines on one page)

Digg (Reddit before Reddit)

StumbleUpon

Webrings

Guestbooks to sign

Geocities (before it became Yahoo Geocities)

Tripod

Angelfire.

t0f0b0 , Ged Carroll/ flickr (not the actual photo) Report

Rotten.com. I remember checking out this site in internet cafes and hoping no-one else was looking in. Gross, but informative.

anon Report

Web Rings. Even people back in the day don’t seem to remember them. They remember page counters, and guest books, but never the web ring…

My Geocities pages had all of those.

anon Report

Treating chat rooms like real, physical places. Like, with an established setting and stuff. People would narrate what they’re doing in that space as they talked. Usually with a font or marker to designate the action: goes to the table and sips coffee.

CrazyPlato Report

That awful, grating sound that no Human can ever perfectly replicate, that came out of your modem before your Internet connection would actually become stable.

cuckingfomputer Report


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Unlike Gen Z kids, we Millennials never had Snapchat, our own smartphones, and 5G. We grew up with chat rooms, one PC per family, and dial-up internet. The early days of the Internet are starting to feel like something ancient, but the World Wide Web actually began in 1989. AOL and IRC were all the rage in the late ’80s, which makes them more than 30 years old.

The years of the early Internet had a lot of interesting phenomena. That’s why one Redditor decided to ask fellow Internet veterans: “What’s something ancient that only an Internet veteran would remember?” Mine is probably the old-school message boards, specifically the Dragon Ball Z-related ones. If there are any Internet veterans out here, let us know your picks!

“Computer Rooms”: People Share Things Only Old-Internet OG’s Remember (45 Answers) Google not existing

Netscape Navigator

Excite, HotBot, Lycos, Altavista, Webcrawler

Amazon is just an online bookstore

IRC

ICQ, AIM, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, Trillian

Yahoo Chatrooms

Yahoo Games

Usenet

AOL

CompuServe

Prodigy

NetZero

Edit: More below:

As u/TheOCDGeek reminded me, Juno (free email and later free internet). There were a ton of free internet services (dial-up) for a while. Most were backed by one company that I can't remember the name of.

About.com

Ask Jeeves

Metacrawler (get results from many search engines on one page)

Digg (Reddit before Reddit)

StumbleUpon

Webrings

Guestbooks to sign

Geocities (before it became Yahoo Geocities)

Tripod

Angelfire.

t0f0b0 , Ged Carroll/ flickr (not the actual photo) Report

Rotten.com. I remember checking out this site in internet cafes and hoping no-one else was looking in. Gross, but informative.

anon Report

Web Rings. Even people back in the day don't seem to remember them. They remember page counters, and guest books, but never the web ring...

My Geocities pages had all of those.

anon Report

Treating chat rooms like real, physical places. Like, with an established setting and stuff. People would narrate what they’re doing in that space as they talked. Usually with a font or marker to designate the action: goes to the table and sips coffee.

CrazyPlato Report

That awful, grating sound that no Human can ever perfectly replicate, that came out of your modem before your Internet connection would actually become stable.

cuckingfomputer Report

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