Geocities Shutting Down Today 396
Paolo DF writes "Geocities is closing today. Its advent in 1995 was a sign of the rising 'Internet for everyone' era, when connection speeds were 1,000x or 2,000x slower than is common today. You may love it or hate it, but millions of people had their first contact with a Web presence right here. I know that Geocities is something that most Slashdotters will see as a n00b thing — the Internet was fine before Geocities — but nevertheless I think that some credit is due. Heck, there's even a modified xkcd homepage to mark the occasion." Reader commodore64_love notes a few more tributes around the Web. Last spring we discussed Yahoo's announcment that Geocities would be going away.
Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:4, Insightful)
Meh, it paved the way for the horrors of design and content that replaced it... MySpace and blogs. We've still got those.
Re: (Score:2)
Except no one is writing their own MySpace layout, you just copy a bunch of CSS from some template site.
Re: (Score:2)
That's not a whole lot different from how people made Geocities pages.
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Funny)
People *made* Geocities pages? I thought they just typed random stuff in MS Frontpage...
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Interesting)
IIRC, I was under the CapeCanaveral directory, number 9799. I haven't even checked it in years.
I used Sizzling HTML Jalfezi and hand-coding to make my Geocities page. When they brought in the WYSIWYG editor, I was still using notepad to edit my pages. Those HTML skills have paid more than one bill and translated very handily to XML.
But that's not all. The skills I learned kludging my way through Geocities (and with Jalfrezi) still get used today. I write a handful of websites for the volunteer organizations I'm with, and more than one employer's website has been upgraded with a few of the things I learned from GC. It was a great sandbox where you could learn the basics of the web framework and HTML coding. Yeah, you couldn't host fark or /. on there, but it let you see how tables worked, what a page of animated GIFs looked like, and how to insert javascript into a website. Hey, I wore teal clothing because it was in style. Don't mock the GIF / MIDI that was the style at the time.
Finally, and this is the best part, it indirectly put me into contact with a woman I'd never met. After a little bit of contact, we went on a date. Long story short, we've been married for eleven years and have two kids.
We joke that the Internet (and I will capitalize it until they give away all my parts) created life.
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Funny)
Except no one is writing their own MySpace layout, you just copy a bunch of CSS from some template site.
So rather than inventing their own ugly, people can copy-paste generic pre-made ugly. Ah, the wonders of progress...
Re: (Score:3)
You might like something like Dropbox [getdropbox.com] where you get space, automatic synchronization, and web access to the files.
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Funny)
I'm annoyed. Geocities was a convenient place for me to dump files I needed to access from home or work. It was also more customizable than Livejournal or Facebook.
http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1416685&cid=29855905 [slashdot.org]
First off, I think we should disclose who we work for. I work for the a defense contractor that builds tanks. You probably work for RIAA or some other content company.
And still we wonder why secret stuff leaks :)
Re:Internet Archived; Time to Move On (Score:5, Funny)
The internet is not just something you dump something on. It's not a big truck.
N00b thing? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's not get all full of ourselves here. We might go way back, but to say that the majority of Slashdotters were online BEFORE Geocities is probably stretching it. I was on the Internet before 1995, and I don't think of Geocities as a "n00b thing." 14 years ago isn't exactly a blink of the eye.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Informative)
Has it been that long?
Can someone help me install Trumpet Winsock so I can get my Windows 3.11 system in the internet using PPP?
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
That word is a swearword to anybody who was new to networking at the time.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Funny)
Sure can! There's a Pirated copy of the latest version on the BBS at 455-343-2121 use the username: P1rat3s and the Password of :arrrrgh! It's under the utilities section.
They only have 3 lines so try late at night or keep redialing.
While you are there try the new linux thing. You can download the first disk set of yggdrasl there. It's really cool!
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Insightful)
Trumpet Winsock wasn't exactly a problem, every computer magazine with a cd had it and Netscape Navigator 1.0 on it. But I had to download the Internet Access Kit and the PPP driver for OS/2 Warp at some BBS.
Aah, what a time. Back then IBM WebExplorer was a decent browser and MSIE was not even in planning.
Re: (Score:2)
Ah yes, Trumpet Winsock... brings up great memories of Saturday morning Warcraft 2-fests against/with my mac-loving friend across town.
I don't recall needing it to get on the internet, but I may have been doing more BBSes than internet back then.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Interesting)
I hate using MS-DOS with the Windows overlay.
On a Commodore all you need to do is shove a cartridge in the rear and run an ethernet cable into it. Plug'n'play in 1982 baby! ;-)
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Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Interesting)
Amen - sure, Geocities lowered the barrier to constructing content (in the sense that you didn't need a shell account or to know how to use one), but you still needed to figure out HTML. You still needed to be a little bit geeky.
The full "social networks" that came after Geocities, those are what lowered the barrier to the degree where it's a "n00b thing."
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Geocities offered a WYSIWYG page builder - you didn't need to know HTML.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
N00b is relative. In those days, to become a n00b, you had to first know the internet existed (many were blissfully unaware), then figure out Linux or Trumpet winsock. Being a bit geeky was a prerequisite for n00bdom on the net. Then AOL came along and lowered the bar for becoming a n00b (and thus the quality of n00bs).
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Then AOL came along and lowered the bar for becoming a n00b (and thus the quality of n00bs).
I was an AOL user, you insensitive clod!
Actually, I had AOL starting in 1993, so I was online (for certain values of "online") before Geocities came along. I was a bit of a late bloomer when it came to being an Internet geek. Most of my code hacking and game playing was offline until I got to college.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Funny)
I was an AOL user, you insensitive clod!
Me, too!
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Funny)
I don't see any low UIDs, young grasshopper...
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Funny)
I am not a number! I am- Oh wait, I'm number 6130. Ha! In your face number 6131!
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Interesting)
"Slashdot? Pfft. It'll never last."
Slashdot of yore didn't last. Slashdot of mindless fanboyism killed it. Now with 30495% more JavaScript as well!
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Funny)
Get a haircut, hippie. And get off my lawn.
Damned kids these days with their nostalgia...
Re:N00b thing? (Score:4, Funny)
Is that you, uncle Clint?
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I think "senior citizen" is the politically correct term.
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Yes Geocities was pretty early in the history of the Web. I first got Mosaic on my Amiga late-1993, and the Geocities company was founded only one year later.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think you misunderstood the n00b comment.
I don't think they meant that people who joined the internet during or after Geocities are n00bs. It meant that Geocities was a way for n00bs to join the internet. Geocities was a point of entry for people who wanted a web page but didn't know HTML, or know what an ISP was, and couldn't pay monthly fees. It was a place where the tag found popularity, full of obnoxious backgrounds, and embedded sound effects. It was a place for n00bs.
Basically, it was like MySpace.
Re: (Score:2)
Slashdot removed my marquee tag. :-)
"It was a place where <marquee> found popularity."
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Interesting)
I do remember when geocities came online. I was still using Windows 3.1 (really hadn't played with linux much) and had a shell connection to a Solaris machine run by Oregon EDNET (compass). If you search around google you'll find references to that.
Anyhow I thought it was cool they were basically giving away website space for free. The original version of it wasn't a banner, popup encursted nightmare - those came later, probably when someone who worked there woke up one day and asked themselves how it was going to make money.
For sure - my first website ever was on geocities.
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure fourteen years must be close to an Internet Millennium.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe it's different for different products; like for search engines there was the Age of Lycos, and now the Age of Google (of course I might also argue there was an Age of DejaNews).
Re:N00b thing? (Score:5, Informative)
In November 1994 Netscape released its first beta, in December its first full version. For me, this was really when the web began to look more interesting - Navigator was well-made, there was graphical content and so forth. Also, don't forget, Navigator could use the Gopher protocol (my Firefox still can - Aerv.nl [aerv.nl]. From early 1995 on, you began to see an explosion of web content.
As far as hosting - in early 1996 I began working at an ISP which charged $50 a month for 10 megabytes of disk space, and the use of CGI, email and so forth was extra. And we were real cheap compared to some local competitors - people came flooding in to use us. Geocities began offering free (with advertising, a Geocities URL etc.) web pages in mid-1995, I created one in October 1995, as I certainly could not afford to shell out $50 a month for my web page back then. There was nothing really n00b about Geocities, Craigslist's web page did not have HTML as a job requirement when Geocities launched, in fact, Craigslist did not have a web page until 1996, the year after Geocities launched.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Back in those day getting a pipeline for hosting was very expensive. $1,000 a month for a T1. Cable Modems, DSL weren't there perhaps only in R&D, and some very select markets. The fastest way to connect was threw an ISDN line. Which was still expensive, but gave you speeds about 120Kbs. Most of the time you were on Modems ranging from speeds of 14.4k - 56.8 k Running a server off of this was silly at best. Geocities was a good place to cut your teeth in making webpages. Yes most of them were rathe
WTF Yahoo! (Score:5, Funny)
WTF! Didn't they see my gif saying my site was under construction!
Re: (Score:2)
Me too, I even had a message scrolling by in Marquee saying it's still a work in progress!
Re:WTF Yahoo! (Score:5, Informative)
At least they archived all the "under construction" gifs [textfiles.com] (WARNING: clicking on that link may be dangerous to your mental health.) If anyone's interested this [metafilter.com] metafilter thread has the story of the guy who created the first of these gifs about halfway in.
Re: (Score:2)
At least they archived all the "under construction" gifs [textfiles.com] (WARNING: clicking on that link may be dangerous to your mental health.)
Ah, the wonders of a blind text search. I recognize one of them [textfiles.com] as being not an "under construction" banner, but part of a screenshot [lemon64.com] from "Ultimate Wizard", presumably extracted for a fansite that wanted to replicate UW's mainpage.
I KNEW all my years before various level editors would eventually come in handy!
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
(WARNING: clicking on that link may be dangerous to your mental health.)
Apparently. It was blocked by the firewall at work as "porn." I guess whoever categorized that page went insane and has developed a fetish for Under Construction GIFs.
Re:XKCD (Score:5, Funny)
XKCD [xkcd.com] has a lovely tribute to it today as well.
... which it says in the summary. I know a lot of people on here don't RTFA, but to not read the summary either??? What exactly do you read?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:XKCD (Score:5, Funny)
Just gives an empty box, what do I type?
:wq
hmm
^D
meh
^X^C
nope.. ah, "Submit"?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
you must be new here.
Re:XKCD (Score:4, Funny)
Moo (Score:2, Funny)
Fat Cat: I'd commemorate this by linking to my page on Geocities, but, well...
check the source. (Score:5, Informative)
<HTML WEB="2.0">
<HEAD>
<TITLE>
...
</HTML>
GOTO 10
Re: (Score:2)
And you're not even going to mention the
INT MAIN(VOID) { COUT "\
at the top?
Re:check the source. (Score:5, Interesting)
I liked the
No C:/ links? (Score:3, Insightful)
I dug the broken image links but i would have liked to see one or two hrefs point at a C: drive.
It Feels like a wave crashing over me... (Score:2)
But I don't know if its Nostalgia or Relief...
Too bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It had some really interesting sites for its day. Like this one [geocities.com] I found just the other day with a chronology of Asimov's Foundation universe and a list of characters not updated in over 10 years. Soon to be lost in the ether or stuck in some archive somewhere I guess.
Re:Too bad (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think there's less unique content. I think there's -more- non-unique content. You're just having trouble finding the unique content because you're traveling in the well-known circles. I still find plenty of things that only return a few results in Google that are actually for what I want.
And the fact that things are repeated isn't bad, either. The other day I wanted to know how to thicken honey. I buy 'spreadable' honey at the store, but I prefer the taste of some other more earthy honeys and want them spreadable. Turns out it's called 'whipped honey' by most people and you actually don't -add- anything to it. Because there are a dozen or so sites about it, 1 of them actually managed to hit enough that my keywords found it. If there had been only 1 site, I probably would still be wondering a year from now.
Re:Too bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: xkcd (Score:2)
And why on earth am I seeing a banner ad here on the slashdot comment page that says geocities?
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
It's called CSS. You might want to learn it sometime.
<TD><FONT COLOR="#bababa"><span style="text-decoration:blink;"><BLINK><A HREF="http://dynamic.xkcd.com/random/comic/" id="rnd_btn_t">rAnDoM</A></span></BLINK>
Re: (Score:2)
I'm using Opera - both blink and scroll are working ;)
Skulls.. (Score:2)
Long live the rotating,flaming skull!
Ah Geocities, farewell (Score:5, Interesting)
Goodbye, Jesux (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot killed Geocities faster than Yahoo! (Score:2)
I'm going to bet 20$ on "capacity problems".
Rest in peace (Score:2)
Now we begin (Score:2)
So Long and Thanks for all the Blink Tags! (Score:5, Funny)
So Long and Thanks for all the Blink Tags!
xkcd (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Source code (Score:3, Informative)
{HTML WEB="2.0"}
{SCRIPT LANGUAGE="QBASIC">IF $BROWSER = "IE" THEN GOTO 50{/SCRIPT}
{TABLE BORDER="5" CELLPADDING="5" SHELL="REGEDIT.EXE"}
Re: (Score:2)
Wowa, thank's for pointing that out I would have missed it otherwise. The work and thinking behind XKCD is both amazing and scary at the same time.
I guess I'm falling under the old timer category now, because damn this makes me nastalgic for things like being amazed at this HTML stuff learning it in high school and being amazed at how much better Netscape Navigator was from Mosaic.
R.I.P. (Score:4, Insightful)
Got to give credit where credit is due... (Score:5, Interesting)
We often overlook the idea of using web sites as a form of expression, but that's exactly what a lot of the self-made websites were back then. And I remember seeing a lot of really amazing layouts being made by people who otherwise had no interest in anything techy, a little after CSS hit the mainstream.
Say what you will, but Geocities got a lot of young people - myself included - to get their hands dirty with web design. I, for one, will miss it.
Re: (Score:2)
LOL forgot about Angelfire!
I also remember people used to use these sites to host pirated stuff before there were torrents and the like.
Sure they would get taken down pretty quickly, but while they were up it was "come and get it while you still can!"
I wonder... (Score:2)
How many links are going to broken after today? Then again, is there anything out there that hasn't been improved and stored away somewhere else?
Re: (Score:2)
I think vmex, the source engine map decompiler, is/was hosted at geocities. I've got a local copy of the zip file, but I know the mirrors (which were linked to from the geocities site) were down, which is going to hurt new mappers to the community. The geocities site is linked from Valve's developer wiki even.
Oldfart? (Score:3)
Loved the old Geocities (Score:3, Interesting)
There was a load of shit on Geocities especially after Yahoo bought them but it was also full of tons of useful info. After all that's all some people had to share info and all sites were ugly even if most were but let's face it the web in general is a bit ugly compared to now.
Geocities could at least give people a platform to learn web design and development. You don't get that really with most social sites these days and most people's myspace site is ugly as sin so in some ways we haven't really advanced.
Marking the occasion (Score:5, Funny)
Geospam (Score:2, Insightful)
All of those pop-ups and banner ads is the reason why I steered clear of Geoci
not that different from MySpace, Facebook (Score:2)
Geocities wasn't all that different from MySpace and Facebook: it gave people a simple way to create a web presence. It was lacking the "viral" aspect of the social networking sites, but arguably, that may have been a good thing...
I know I am going to regret this... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.geocities.com/darthvain/ [geocities.com]
As much as geocities is horrible I don't think it holds a candle to "Myspace" web monstrosities with music and flashing crap. Geocities was good because it was the first big thing that let you host "stuff" for free. Now freehosting services are a dime a dozen, geocities isn't really needed, not to mention the myspaces and facebooks of the world now. However back in the day, if you didn't want to pay to host your own stuff, or didn't want to mess around a lot of dynamic IPs, host updaters, and setting up a private webserver and dns server (or pay for web creation software, or even bother to learn html) for the absolute free experience for a personal web page geocities was there. Again, now there are tons of free services out there, and pay ones that are not nearly as expensive as they used to be. Most noobs used it to basically say "Hi look at me, I am on the web!" which was served by MySpace and now Facebook really. ...and before you respond yes I know my geocities site is crap and I haven't updated it in years. Don't judge me, I was weak. :)
Here is an actual geocities site going away today (Score:2)
without geocities (Score:3, Funny)
i would never have known that ninjas are mammals
http://www.realultimatepower.net/ninja/ninja2.htm [realultimatepower.net]
Geocities lead me to my wife (Score:5, Interesting)
I got an email from a stranger in the Philippines asking for help with a document she found on my website. I responded (somewhat begrudgingly), she thanked me. I followed a link to her Geocities homepage in her signature line, and (seeing her photos) began emailing her.
http://www.geocities.com/balene46/Photo_Gallery.html [geocities.com]
We've been married four years now. ...and have a great toddler.
http://www.cgstock.com/personal/arlene_gregerson [cgstock.com]
http://www.cgstock.com/athena [cgstock.com]
Thanks, geocities.
Re:Geocities lead me to my wife (Score:5, Funny)
So now that Geocities is shutting down does that mean your marriage will be annulled? Check the TOS. I'm pretty sure it does.
Sucks, dude. :(
One of the greatest lessons ever learned... (Score:5, Insightful)
Geocities made me realize that it is not the medium people lack, but the talent. I would see thousands of people trying to communicate a message and it was really sad to find out that their message would be best if it wasn't communicated at all. Painters with no skill, musicians with no muse, writers who couldn't write an interesting paragraph etc.
I remember I was so optimistic about the freedom of expression and what I experienced in Geocities still remains one of the most bitter experiences about people in general. Perhaps the most. Seeing all those ungifted people patting each other in the back, refusing to accept what they created was trash it was disheartening every day.
I was raised with the philosophy that "whoever thinks freely, thinks well" and it was in Geocities that I discovered how false that is. I am thankful for that, but did it have to be so blunt?
Re:One of the greatest lessons ever learned... (Score:5, Funny)
I hear you. There was a time I thought that Slashdotters, given their ability to create a free account or post anonymously, could one day shape the ideas of millions through their multitude of Informative or Insightful opinions. Instead, all we got were a bunch of jaded windbags complaining incessantly about how mediocre everyone else in the world is.
I felt a great disturbance in the Internet (Score:5, Funny)
It's as if millions of awful websites suddenly cried out and were suddenly silenced. But no one heard them because no one has actually viewed any of them in years.
Oh SiliconValley Peaks #3737 (Score:5, Interesting)
xkcd talent (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
>>>www.geocities.com/MotorCity/1108
If you paid a dollar a month you could have changed this to something useful like geocities.com/fprintf
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3)
Geocities was a primary school kid drawing a fire engine, that sort of thing. Myspace is a bunch of secondary school kids repeatedly etching their names into the bus windows.