So Long, GeoCities: We Forgot You Still Existed
#2
Posted 23 April 2009 - 03:03 PM
"first-generation Internet dorks (known then as "former SysOps")"
Wow. Sounds like the bitterness of a third generation dork wannabe at missing out on the beginning. Actually, the whole article reads that way. Yeah, the scrolling marquees and animated gifs look quaint compared to embedded YouTube videos and the Flash intro pages that just won't seem to die no matter how badly we want them to, but just wait. In 15 years, we'll be able to get on the Wayback Machine and make fun of PCWorld 2009, JR Raphael and his obsession with putting Twitter, the latest flash in the pan, in his author profile.
Wow. Sounds like the bitterness of a third generation dork wannabe at missing out on the beginning. Actually, the whole article reads that way. Yeah, the scrolling marquees and animated gifs look quaint compared to embedded YouTube videos and the Flash intro pages that just won't seem to die no matter how badly we want them to, but just wait. In 15 years, we'll be able to get on the Wayback Machine and make fun of PCWorld 2009, JR Raphael and his obsession with putting Twitter, the latest flash in the pan, in his author profile.
#4
Posted 23 April 2009 - 03:18 PM
While GeoCities sucked from the beginning and was most-commonly compared to the Internet version of an Electrolux, JR Raphael's report reeks of the envy of a young, untalented, non-creative hack who wishes he had gotten the money from Yahoo instead.
I won't miss GeoCities, but I wouldn't miss JR Raphael, either.
I won't miss GeoCities, but I wouldn't miss JR Raphael, either.
#7
Posted 23 April 2009 - 04:21 PM
If anybody ever looked up ship's history, more than likely, it was hosted by geocities. I have found many a ship there including the one I was aboard. Iwas much easier than prowling around through the Naval Archives, which can be interesting in it's own right. coastie65
#8
Posted 23 April 2009 - 04:42 PM
GeoCities may not have been a haven for well constructed web-sites but I fail to see how their infamously poor architecture and animated GIFs are any worse than quite a bit of what one still finds online. Because MySpace's embedded MIDI was always so very welcome.
As anachronistic and poorly thought out as GeoCities was, I don't see how PC World has room to criticize. Have you ever visited the site? It's a mess!
As anachronistic and poorly thought out as GeoCities was, I don't see how PC World has room to criticize. Have you ever visited the site? It's a mess!
#10
Posted 23 April 2009 - 04:48 PM
At one time Geocities was a good home for amateurs who made ugly looking webpages that played music and looked garish.
But sites that Myspace eventually took up that role and exceeded the work of the amateurs with bad design sense a thousand times over.
Actually, Geocities was never as bad as what Myspace became.
But sites that Myspace eventually took up that role and exceeded the work of the amateurs with bad design sense a thousand times over.
Actually, Geocities was never as bad as what Myspace became.
#13
Posted 23 April 2009 - 06:09 PM
I hadn't forgotten GeoCities existed. Since 1993 when I used my OS/2-powered 486 to reach it via dial-up, my resume has been posted there (updated occasionally), and has gotten more more useful job leads than all the Dice, Monsters, and CareerBuilders combined. GeoCities, we salute you!
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