- Joined
- Feb 10, 2017
Usenet, undeniably the precursor to your modern day internet forum website, is still around today (well over 40 years after its launch), but these days is largely used on a much smaller scale (mainly for stuff like filesharing - something about Usenet's filesharing system being superior to Bittorrent). I was born too a little too late to experience Usenet when it was a massive thing, but I've recently been browsing through older posts made through Usenet, and it intrigued me how the atmosphere was not all that different from internet forums of today, albeit with better manners (and for that matter, better grammar). There seems to be quite a bit of old timers here that are familiar with Usenet and love to reminisce about its heyday, so this thread can be a way for those to share posts from a bygone era where users of the internet were nerds sperging about what was current then rather than retards that seethe about politicians they don't like.
Starting off strong with something I print screened earlier today for the Simpsons Griefing Thread:
Some Betamax nerd coping and seething about VHS:

SJWs were alive and well in 1989:

And finally, this guy complaining about someone clogging up the darn internet by listing songs from Miami Vice (probably the most 1980s Usenet post):

I used usenetarchives.com to search up these ancient posts (with help from a handy newsgroup index), though there are other (better) ways to browse, and even still post on Usenet. Many of these solutions require payment, but it will likely be very much worth being able to get a feel for what the internet was like way back when.
Starting off strong with something I print screened earlier today for the Simpsons Griefing Thread:
Some Betamax nerd coping and seething about VHS:

SJWs were alive and well in 1989:

And finally, this guy complaining about someone clogging up the darn internet by listing songs from Miami Vice (probably the most 1980s Usenet post):

I used usenetarchives.com to search up these ancient posts (with help from a handy newsgroup index), though there are other (better) ways to browse, and even still post on Usenet. Many of these solutions require payment, but it will likely be very much worth being able to get a feel for what the internet was like way back when.