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    4. 90s internet

    90s internet

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Chit-Chat
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    • edieto
      E
      edieto Supporters
      last edited by

      man i remember goin on the Internet on windows 95 it was wild as a kid pop ups all over the place no clue what a virus was slow ass dialup it was the wildwest back then seen stuff online was like wtf is this and internet explorer yahoo as the search
      i miss it some times but that may be the younger me as the new internet is much faster with much more you can look up and more then llike 2 or 3 browsers lol

      DoctorG
      D
      stardepp
      S
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    • DoctorG
      D
      DoctorG Soprano @edieto
      last edited by

      @edieto OMG! The 1995 up tp 2000's were AOL browser, Netscrap and InternetExploder.
      And slooow with 16KB/s, with modems making shrill music while dialing-in. 😉

      _bug hunter · Volunteer helper · Sopranos tester · Language DE,EN · ♀👵
      Known old dragon lady: Gwen aka Dr. Gwen Agon aka GwenDragon aka DoctorGTesting


      Linux Debian 12 KDE X11 / Windows 11 Pro
      Intel i5-7400 / NVidia GT 710

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    • mikeyb2001
      M
      mikeyb2001 Supporters Ambassador
      last edited by

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gsNaR6FRuO0

      Michael Burke
      Vivaldi Links 🔗 Search Engine collection Windows 10(Laptop)|Android 15(Mobile)

      DoctorG
      D
      edieto
      E
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    • DoctorG
      D
      DoctorG Soprano @mikeyb2001
      last edited by

      @mikeyb2001 Yesss!

      _bug hunter · Volunteer helper · Sopranos tester · Language DE,EN · ♀👵
      Known old dragon lady: Gwen aka Dr. Gwen Agon aka GwenDragon aka DoctorGTesting


      Linux Debian 12 KDE X11 / Windows 11 Pro
      Intel i5-7400 / NVidia GT 710

      mikeyb2001
      M
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    • stardepp
      S
      stardepp Translator Ambassador @edieto
      last edited by

      @edieto Maybe you'll find something from the good old days here:

      https://archive.org

      🍀 Work spaces changed my work flow🍀Search Engine Collection🍀My Themes🍀Windows11 24H2🍀Samsung Galaxy A 54 5G | Android 15 🍀

      PublicWolf
      P
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    • mikeyb2001
      M
      mikeyb2001 Supporters Ambassador @DoctorG
      last edited by

      @DoctorG sometimes a quick youtube search gives you exactly what you're looking for

      Michael Burke
      Vivaldi Links 🔗 Search Engine collection Windows 10(Laptop)|Android 15(Mobile)

      edieto
      E
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    • Catweazle
      C
      Catweazle
      last edited by Catweazle

      Also a nice page with the timeline of old internet days is this one, beginning with this

      alt text

      And the first Spam Mail

      alt text

      >Laptop ACER, AMD Ryzen, GPU AMD Radeon  RAM 16GB, SSD 512GB -Win11 Home 64 v24H2| Vivaldi last stable|

      👉 Vivaldi links👈 My Themes

      Pathduck
      P
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    • edieto
      E
      edieto Supporters @mikeyb2001
      last edited by

      @mikeyb2001 i do that some times its a blast to see how much the internet has come along from then to now

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    • edieto
      E
      edieto Supporters @mikeyb2001
      last edited by

      @mikeyb2001 goin to save that lol

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
    • PublicWolf
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      PublicWolf Supporters @stardepp
      last edited by

      @stardepp Oh my good gravy. I had to look up an old site I used to run. It was for gay ranchers/cowboys back when we were all pretty much in the closet for safety.

      What a thing the internet was for us back then!

      https://web.archive.org/web/20020802194222/http://www.crotalus.com/archive/2001-02-05/2001-02-05.html

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
    • Pathduck
      P
      Pathduck Moderator Soprano Supporters @Catweazle
      last edited by Pathduck

      @Catweazle Of special interest in the Arpanet image:

      d9756f6a-aef8-486f-aa8d-8a735cc40344-image.png

      The "squiggles" are a satellite connection:
      "NORSAR was the first non-US site included in ARPANET in June 1973. Its connection went via the Tanum Earth Station in Sweden to the Seismic Data Analysis Center (SDAC) in Virginia, United States."
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORSAR

      For me the "golden age" of the web was the decade from 1996 (when I started uni studies and got access) to maybe about ~2006 when it went downhill with social media, rampant commercialization, ads and tracking and Google took over basically everything.

      🎻Volunteer helper · Forum moderator · Sopranos tester 🛠️Troubleshooting 🐛Report a bug 📜Markdown help
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    • DoctorG
      D
      DoctorG Soprano
      last edited by DoctorG

      Pre-WWW: Any person knowing the old mailbox system (BBS) for communication?
      UseNet?
      I remember using Mausnet in DACH countries.

      _bug hunter · Volunteer helper · Sopranos tester · Language DE,EN · ♀👵
      Known old dragon lady: Gwen aka Dr. Gwen Agon aka GwenDragon aka DoctorGTesting


      Linux Debian 12 KDE X11 / Windows 11 Pro
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      Pathduck
      P
      Catweazle
      C
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    • Pathduck
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      Pathduck Moderator Soprano Supporters @DoctorG
      last edited by

      @DoctorG I did some BBSing from a friend's house in the early 90s. Mostly to download Amiga scene demos and pirated games 😉

      The BBS Documentary by Jason Scott is worth a watch for anyone interested in computing history (it's a lot of talking though...)
      https://archive.org/details/bbs_the_documentary

      Jason also maintains a huge collection of the types of text files you'd find on BBSes, including the infamous "Anarchist Cookbook".
      http://textfiles.com

      UseNet?

      I used Xnews to read newsgroups in the 00s - mostly lurked on opera.beta and trawled alt.binaries for "interesting pics" 🙂
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xnews

      🎻Volunteer helper · Forum moderator · Sopranos tester 🛠️Troubleshooting 🐛Report a bug 📜Markdown help
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    • Catweazle
      C
      Catweazle @DoctorG
      last edited by Catweazle

      @DoctorG, the other day @Ruarí mencioned Happy Net Box, which use an paleolitic funcion from Windows, Mac and Unix systems, "FINGER", which is still working from the cmd line. In Linux isn't native and need to be installed first.

      >Laptop ACER, AMD Ryzen, GPU AMD Radeon  RAM 16GB, SSD 512GB -Win11 Home 64 v24H2| Vivaldi last stable|

      👉 Vivaldi links👈 My Themes

      Ruarí
      R
      1 Reply Last reply
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    • Ruarí
      R
      Ruarí Supporters Vivaldi Team @Catweazle
      last edited by

      @Catweazle said in 90s internet:

      In Linux isn't native and need to be installed first.

      Not true, in my experience it is pre-installed on many (most?) distros.

      P.S. If you do have it to hand run this from the terminal

      finger [email protected]
      
      Ruarí
      R
      2 Replies Last reply
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    • Ruarí
      R
      Ruarí Supporters Vivaldi Team @Ruarí
      last edited by Ruarí

      Also it is such a simple protocol there are a whole bunch of tricks to get the server to return you a result with other tools anyway. For example to use a basic tool like netcat

      $ printf 'vivaldiversion\r\n' | nc happynetbox.com 79
      

      Or telnet

      $ (echo vivaldiversion; sleep 1) | telnet happynetbox.com 79
      

      This is how you trick curl via either using telnet as a protocol

      $ printf 'vivaldiversion\r\n' | curl telnet://happynetbox.com:79
      

      or make it look like gopher

      $ curl gopher://happynetbox.com:79/0vivaldiversion
      

      Side note. I still have a bunch of stuff hosted on gopher. I last updated it late in 2023 but I should probably upload something again. If you have lynx installed, you can see for yourself.

      lynx gopher://sdf.org/1/users/r0/phlog/
      

      EDIT: Ok I just updated my gopher based "journal" and finger status on a couple of different servers.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
    • Ruarí
      R
      Ruarí Supporters Vivaldi Team @Ruarí
      last edited by Ruarí

      @Ruarí said in 90s internet:

      … run this from the terminal

      finger [email protected]
      

      I actually use that all the time on our various test machines to check/remind myself what we have public at any given time.

      Also fun

      finger [email protected]
      

      If you want to check on the version numbers of our desktop competitors.

      P.P.S. I'll let your work out my update timestamps on those. Yes I am a wierdo. 🤷🏼

      Pathduck
      P
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    • Ruarí
      R
      Ruarí Supporters Vivaldi Team
      last edited by Ruarí

      Oh and @Catweazle if you are looking for finger hosting, as well as HappyNetBox, there is also https://plan.cat which is also (wierdly) accessible via ActivityPub so you can see it from your Mastodon account. Because… well… because… why not? 🤪

      i.e., either

      finger [email protected]
      

      Or: https://social.vivaldi.net/@[email protected]/112971838920926579

      EDIT: Oh and it also has an RSS feed https://plan.cat/~ruari.rss because again… why not? 🤣

      thatworkshop
      T
      1 Reply Last reply
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    • Pathduck
      P
      Pathduck Moderator Soprano Supporters @Ruarí
      last edited by

      @Ruarí said in 90s internet:

      P.P.S. I'll let your work out my update timestamps on those. Yes I am a wierdo.

      Yes you are... 🤪

      My percentages of time-fu is crap so I resort to:
      https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=45.9%25+of+24+hours

      Then:

      $ date -d "00:00 today + 11 hours 57.6 seconds"
      16 Aug 2024 11:00:57
      

      Hmm, but that would mean you updated it long before you posted the topic?
      16 Aug 2024, 12:38

      🎻Volunteer helper · Forum moderator · Sopranos tester 🛠️Troubleshooting 🐛Report a bug 📜Markdown help
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      Ruarí
      R
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    • Ruarí
      R
      Ruarí Supporters Vivaldi Team @Pathduck
      last edited by Ruarí

      @Pathduck Close but you forgot about timezones and my script works in UTC, which is actually stated there if you read carefully.

      EDIT: Actually now I see you did account for UTC so … correct.

      Here is how I would have done it starting with Updated: 2024-08-16 [45.9% @0 Lon]

      First, let's convert that to seconds

      • 864*45.9 ≈ 39657 [rounded down to the nearest second]

      Now make that into minutes

      • 39657/60 ≈ 660 minutes into the day (again with time you always round down)

      Now make that hours

      • 660/60 ≈ 11 hours into the day or 11:00 as you noted

      Finally it states "@0 Lon" or "at 0° Longitude", thus UTC. While Norway (where you are I are based) is currently CEST (Central European Summer Time) or UTC +2 hours and thus that was updated last at 13:00 (1PM) Norwegian local time.

      Why!? Well… why do I do race penny farthings or commute via unicycle in the snow? To amuse "myself" because I am a weirdo! 😜

      Ruarí
      R
      Pathduck
      P
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