What was your number one favorite website 'back in the day', that is now defunct?
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Joecartoon
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I don't know about number one, but a few that I miss.
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freshmeat.net. Announcements of open source software releases and updates.
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newegg.com --- computer components retailer --- is still around, but it doesn't hold the spot it once did.
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bash.org. Searchable list of funny, ranked quotes from IRC and similar. There are some archives, like this one.
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A few "hosting" sites that went down with a lot of user-created content. No one thing was amazing, maybe, but it produced a lot of dangling links. Geocities: "At least 38 million pages, most written by users, were displayed by GeoCities before it was terminated.[7] The GeoCities Japan version of the service lasted until March 31, 2019.[8]". AngelFire. Tripod. Apparently the latter two are still around in some limited form.
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Kaleidoscope.net, a site featuring themes for the eponymous classic MacOS themeing software package. They did a good job of generating theme previews. Fun to browse through.
What would you suggest instead of newegg now? I'm still using it out of momentum haven't thought to look elsewhere in a long time
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There was a site I found in '98 or '99 that showed a crap graphics bubble wrap sheet and you could click them all and hear popping sounds!
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It's not defunct tho... Newgrounds is still around.
Actually, none of my favorite websites are defunct. Something Awful, LiveJournal, and Penny-Arcade are also still going.
Long live the old internet.
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I don't know about number one, but a few that I miss.
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freshmeat.net. Announcements of open source software releases and updates.
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newegg.com --- computer components retailer --- is still around, but it doesn't hold the spot it once did.
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bash.org. Searchable list of funny, ranked quotes from IRC and similar. There are some archives, like this one.
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A few "hosting" sites that went down with a lot of user-created content. No one thing was amazing, maybe, but it produced a lot of dangling links. Geocities: "At least 38 million pages, most written by users, were displayed by GeoCities before it was terminated.[7] The GeoCities Japan version of the service lasted until March 31, 2019.[8]". AngelFire. Tripod. Apparently the latter two are still around in some limited form.
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Kaleidoscope.net, a site featuring themes for the eponymous classic MacOS themeing software package. They did a good job of generating theme previews. Fun to browse through.
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Some of the old hardware forms, Gideontech and Pimprig/PCApex.
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No, not the social network with my friend Tom, I mean the online file storage (would now be called 'cloud' storage) site that it was before it died and Tom bought the domain.
It had an astounding 300MB of space available for free, much more than the contemporary competition.
Of course now there's Google Drive, Dropbox, etc. Myspace was just too far ahead of their time.
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Not dead, but not nearly as alive as it used to be.
https://homestarrunner.com/I wanted to say this too, but yeah they are still here. And their latest cartoon is relevant too.
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Imagine my surprise when I just now typed in fark.com and saw that it's still there and it looks exactly like it did 25 years ago. Mind blown! I might even go back.
Florida man
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I kinda miss stumbleupon. Found a lot of cool flash games and stuff from that!
(Link works like stumbleupon basically)
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Firingsquad - gaming focused hardware and news
https://web.archive.org/web/20040630053837/http://firingsquad.com/
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(Link works like stumbleupon basically)
ooh, neat! ty!
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Reddit, I guess. And Google.
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I don't know about number one, but a few that I miss.
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freshmeat.net. Announcements of open source software releases and updates.
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newegg.com --- computer components retailer --- is still around, but it doesn't hold the spot it once did.
-
bash.org. Searchable list of funny, ranked quotes from IRC and similar. There are some archives, like this one.
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A few "hosting" sites that went down with a lot of user-created content. No one thing was amazing, maybe, but it produced a lot of dangling links. Geocities: "At least 38 million pages, most written by users, were displayed by GeoCities before it was terminated.[7] The GeoCities Japan version of the service lasted until March 31, 2019.[8]". AngelFire. Tripod. Apparently the latter two are still around in some limited form.
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Kaleidoscope.net, a site featuring themes for the eponymous classic MacOS themeing software package. They did a good job of generating theme previews. Fun to browse through.
As for bash.org: there's a fedi bot that posts a random quote once per hour:
Comes with the warning about early 2000s humor
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Rip Stumble upon.
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Cracked had a 10/10 movie podcast that was stopped abruptly (after it was bought up & butchered ,laying off like 100 staff) & it was the best movie podcast.
i fondly remember one post once that had me in tears, about teaching somali pirates about ebay
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I spent a lot of time in chat rooms roughly 30 years ago. Yahoo chat rooms were fun, and also The Offspring's old website from back in the late 90s had a chat room. Also I used to get a kick out of the "Ate my balls" webring and the dance ones that started with hamster dance.
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Something happened to fmh-child.org
It isn't what it used to be.
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not dead, but pretty dead anyway: cracked.com
I liked them until they got political. Totally ruined their vibe.
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Not defunct and was only my favorite for a very short period of time, but it left an impression and I still find myself referencing it from time to time. Serving the same great content for 25 years!
I hear anything is possible at that website! Anything at all! The infinite is possible! The unattainable is unknown!