what's "the old internet" for you?
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea I could have picked the tildes and slow internet, but chose MySpace and blogs. My actual preference is between those two, when the DSL I had was fast, but before the corporate take over
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea The first one, but just barely! When I first got Internet access, the WWW existed but it hadn’t really made it out of CERN yet, and it wasn’t anything I was aware of for about eight or nine more months.
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea Throwing the long cable to the phone outlet until mum wants to call someone

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what's "the old internet" for you?

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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea I still remember chatting in bitnet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BITNET not the language model!)
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@joepie91 what would be an example for that?
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea @patterfloof I could really gopher this poll...
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea personal websites everywhere, all individually handmade
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea
The old Internet¹ is when people knew there are other protocols than HTTP(S), when the Internet was one way to access Usenet, when software was provided by anonymous ftp, …And then Angela Bennett (aka Sandra Bullock) ordered the first pizza online…
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¹the Internet is a network of computers based on IP that contains the machine internet.net. This definition is from the IPv4 only times. We still have problems with IPv6. -
@jollysea
The old Internet¹ is when people knew there are other protocols than HTTP(S), when the Internet was one way to access Usenet, when software was provided by anonymous ftp, …And then Angela Bennett (aka Sandra Bullock) ordered the first pizza online…
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¹the Internet is a network of computers based on IP that contains the machine internet.net. This definition is from the IPv4 only times. We still have problems with IPv6.@Lapizistik seems like shortly after option 1.
WWW stands for "world wide web" and describes an "information system that enables content sharing over the Internet using a graphical user interface. It facilitates access to documents and other web resources according to specific rules of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)."
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@Lapizistik seems like shortly after option 1.
WWW stands for "world wide web" and describes an "information system that enables content sharing over the Internet using a graphical user interface. It facilitates access to documents and other web resources according to specific rules of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)."
I know the web from before Tim Berners-Lee created http (remember gopher?

But even when http was there for some years different services still used different hand-crafted protocols – until corporate firewalls started blocking everything besides http(s) and maybe ssh (and sometimes imap(s)) and suddenly all kinds of services were tunneled over https (ok, and REST was invented).
But I am kinda off from your question as you asked from an end user perspective (where most people won't even know about what's going on under the hood). So sorry for derailing

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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea@chaos.social You could find stuff on it.
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what's "the old internet" for you?

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what's "the old internet" for you?

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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea that'd be, in order:
- Arpanet/Early Internet
- Web 1.0
- Early Web 2.0
- Late Web 2.0
Old Internet is whatever that came before the current one and you remember was better, I guess
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what's "the old internet" for you?

@jollysea Web site were usable w/o adblocker. No tracking.
and at least: No Nazis.
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@n_dimension wow you have your old bills on microfiche? please tell me more about that! (unironically, I only know microfiche from movies and TV!)
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I know the web from before Tim Berners-Lee created http (remember gopher?

But even when http was there for some years different services still used different hand-crafted protocols – until corporate firewalls started blocking everything besides http(s) and maybe ssh (and sometimes imap(s)) and suddenly all kinds of services were tunneled over https (ok, and REST was invented).
But I am kinda off from your question as you asked from an end user perspective (where most people won't even know about what's going on under the hood). So sorry for derailing

@Lapizistik tbh I'm loving all the replies, people telling me about times I only know from stories (I knew that gopher existed but never used it, I experienced telnet once!) to forums, early social media etc. It's all fascinating
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@Lapizistik tbh I'm loving all the replies, people telling me about times I only know from stories (I knew that gopher existed but never used it, I experienced telnet once!) to forums, early social media etc. It's all fascinating
@jollysea
Tales from these times are great, and one thing is: it is tales from a time where people were trying to figure out how to do things best without any direct commercial interests – there simply was no one online trying to sell something. -
@jollysea rotten dot com, phpBB, Kazaa/eMule, Lord of the Weed and old messengers like ICQ (*insert new message sound here*) and MSN

@quasiabsolut @jollysea same! Did you click 2 or 3?