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- Jan 20, 2021
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Like I said in another thread, Current Year internet does allow one to see the world and beyond through stuff like Google Earth or downloading stuff like SpaceEngine and Celestia. Stuff that was technologically not exactly feasible in the '90s. And the speed and memory of current systems allows stuff to be done online that wasn't possible then. 360 degree HD stuff, 3D simulations, HD streaming video, etc. So at least there's that going for the Current Year internet, despite the censorship and woke BS.Till then it was all text and shitty websites. 56k dial-up was slow as hell.
I forgot the biggest internet killer of all.
Reddit.
Reddit killed the forums. There used to be a bunch of video game forums on the internet. Now they are all mostly dead or nearly dead. Like the activity is so slow a thread can stay somewhere near the top for days.
I hate Reddit and only use when I have to and it's not often. I avoid using it as much as I can. I remember in the mid and late 2000's there were forums all over the place and they were pretty active. But by the early 2010's they all started to die. It's not like the forums offered any level of free speech. Going over to Reddit wasn't that much of a change.
That was my main assertion as well. Reddit really did a number on a lot of the smaller forums. The sad thing is that reddit is (or at least was) a pretty good site for finding quality content. Stuff that got upvoted was generally deemed to be interesting by a majority of the userbase, and if you were on a specific subreddit, it's likely that you would enjoy the front page of most highly upvoted content whether memes, videos, music, etc. It was basically an inverse forum. On a forum, if someone posts content beyond text, you have to be interested in the title of the thread enough to click on it, and then click on the content, etc. And even so, the point of the thread isn't really to share the content, the point of the thread is to discuss the content.
And that's where Reddit fails. It's pretty good for finding quality content (or at least it was) but it's really poor at discussion. Not even just because of the overzealous moderation, but that's a big part of it. The reason it sucks is that while the upvote system works for interesting content, it's the exact opposite for ideas. Only the most widely accepted, boring, mainstream view get upvoted, whereas more controversial views are downvoted to oblivion. And I'm not even necessarily talking about political stuff. If you go on to the Star Wars subreddit I imagine, and you post something highly critical of the new Disney sequels, you'll be downvoted heavily for not expressing the agreed upon opinion, whereas if you praise them, you'll get upvotes. This is the exact opposite of a traditional forum, or even something more anonymous like 4chan, where the more controversial and shocking opinions will get the most quotes and responses
I still remember CWCki Forums.How far things have gotten now.
Same here. I also remember when "Facebook" started taking off. Glad I never hopped on the "social media" bandwagon.I never got into Myspace.
Remember when guestbooks, webrings, access counters, and "email me" GIFs were a thing?
(also space backgrounds)
Same here. I also remember when "Facebook" started taking off. Glad I never hopped on the "social media" bandwagon.
Here's a website from the early 1990's that's still up and running, virtually unchanged for almost 30 years: LINK90's Internet was magical, but it should never have been invented or at least never relinquished into the hands of libtards.