I’m new to the internet. Only got access to it 3 years ago. Didn’t own a smartphone until last year. I’m curious how it was for people who discovered it earlier.

    • axby@lemmy.ca
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      20 days ago

      Its like this area of tall building that has little to no safety. No elevators, a staircase that ran from ground floor to like idk 7 or 8 floors? And the stairs were exposed to outside the building, meaning you could accidentally fall and die. It took a half an hour to get to the main road where you can actually take a bus and where the malls are at.

      Could you share a picture of this? I tried to find one myself on the internet but couldn’t. That sounds really interesting… were there handrails?

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    When I was in school, so early 1990s? There wasn’t much. I had email, Usenet text based groups, a proxy server at the university I could log onto. That handshake sound of the modem connecting, I will never forget that. Any networking meant running cables to connect things.

  • Alex@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago

    I think the first proper internet I had was downloading files from FTP servers at university. The first time I had it from home was over a modem to Demon ISP running some cobbled together TCP/IP stack for my Atari Falcon.

    It was wild back then, I think even on windows you needed to install an IP stack before you could do anything because Windows didn’t have one but default because why would you?

  • VirtigoMommy@sh.itjust.works
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    21 days ago

    Early internet for me was internet on cd that came in the mail, AIM chat, flash games, dedicated creepypasta sites, pics of boobs that loaded one line of pixels at a time, and getting kicked off so mom could use the phone.

    Obligatory- https://youtu.be/gsNaR6FRuO0

  • N0t_5ure@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    In maybe 1989 my roommate had a computer with a modem and Compuserve. It was cool, but nothing like what came only a few years later when I had a computer with a Netscape browser.

  • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    Showing my age here, but the first time I remember using the web was in the mid-90s when there were only a girl’s of hundred web sites. Almost all of them were universities. But I remember going to playboy.com as a joke and being amazed that there’s was actually a website for it. There was also a pizzahut.com website that pointed to a specific restaurant in San Jose CA.

  • d00phy@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Started with playing MUDs in the university computer lab. Started on Windows 3.11. Got a Mindspring dial-up account while in college, and discovered IRC not long after. Wound up working for an ISP (InfiNet) for awhile in the late 90s.

  • Libra00@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago
    1. I spent a lot of time on BBS’s back in the day. One day a friend from there told me about this number I could dial with my computer to connect to a server at the local university that had a simple shell that couldn’t do much more than telnet, and a few MU*es to check out. I played one of htem for a little bit, then learned about unix machines and shell accounts and managed to get myself one, but even then it was all text-based. I used gopher (before www was really a thing) and then lynx (text-based web browser) to poke around a bit, browsed some newsgroups, etc.
  • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Sometime around 1996 for my personal Internet experience, we got it and a laptop for my mom around 1994 so she could do something while getting her master’s and my parents thought it was super cool so we kept it. We finally got a family computer with a modem in 1996. I had an email penpal. I think I spent an entire day trying to download a demo for a video game that got stopped 75% through because my mom picked up the phone.

  • JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 days ago

    First internet experience for me was 2013 as a child. Back then our home connection had a usage cap of 10GB, but the ISP hosted a “free zone” website that contained a bunch of cartoons and mirrored ABC (Australia) content.

    We would watch YouTube videos together as a family because the bandwidth was considered that previous and laugh at those fail compilations and whatnot.

    Otherwise about a month or two into having internet, I realised that this would open me up to online gaming, and I excitedly put Mineplex’s IP into the cracked copy of Minecraft that I had on a USB from school, only to get an authentication error because I hadn’t bought an account. Managed to stumble into some Dutch server that was cracked and despite the language barrier, had tons of fun trying to work out the game.

    • JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      20 days ago

      Hang on, core memory unlocked.

      About three years before that, a neighbour set up a WiFi network but had open authentication on it.

      I remember seeing it on my little EEE PC and connecting to it. I remember completely not knowing what it was, if it was going to cost my parents data money, or if I’d otherwise get in trouble for using it.

      I had friends on the same street as me, so I showed them this WiFi network and they weren’t really sure if it would charge my parents or not either.

      I had been playing a game that came on a shareware disc called “Wild Wheels” (later learned that was the publisher’s name of the game, the actual name was BuzzingCars) and it referenced ceebot.com as a place to download more demos.

      Well, that was the first website I ever visited and I downloaded a 26MB setup for Colobot, an RTS first person space exploration game that had you literally program robots to complete missions. I was still so anxious that there’d be some massive bill in the mail (hence the setup size still being burned in my head) so that was all I downloaded.

      And oh boy did I play the shit out of that, and I attribute that game to why I still enjoy computing and programming today.

  • I’ve been online since 1993.

    Originally we just had CompuServe, which was kinda like AOL (or at least what I remember of AOL being shown off at the tech museum in San Jose). “Websites” didn’t exactly exist on it, though the WWW became publicly accessible that same year.

    I really only remember two things from CompuServe: the chat rooms, and their MUD “Neverwinter Nights.” Not to be confused with the Bioware RPG, though it was based on the original PnP D&D module.

    Not sure when we switched to the “real” internet, as it is now, but back in the early days it was pretty wild. Funky aesthetics, low res images, no video to speak of. It was super common to just type random words sandwiched between www. and .com to find interesting websites (search engines didn’t exist at first and then kinda sucked once they started being a thing).

    It was a place almost exclusively populated by geeks and enthusiasts so it was extremely weird. But that’s what made it so fun.

  • leadore@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Early '90’s. At first only the government and universities had access to the internet, before the www/world wide web existed. I went to a university before the general public had access via ISPs (which were just dial-up for a long time), so I could get onto it. At first there were just things like Archie and gopher, and a text email thing (pine, I think it was).

    When dial-up became available to the general public, very few people used it at first. I used Compuserve for a while with a 300 baud modem where you could read the text as it slowly came across. But very quickly AOL started up and sent out millions of CDs so more and more people signed up on that–I never used AOL, though. Once I had dial-up at home I used IRC to chat online. That was in the mid 90’s. Good times.

    • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      This is my experience as well. I remember moving from a 28K to a 56K modem was a big deal! Then my dad upgraded us to cable and hoooooooooooly shit!

  • Ydna@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    In 1995, our class had to take a field trip to the library’s computer lab. The teacher had us open Netscape and go to http :// yahoo dot com. Then we printed off some kind of search query. That whole process took about 2 hours lol

  • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    I was like 9, which would make it like 2006, and I remember just typing ‘Star Wars’ into YouTube with my sibling every time we were on the PC unsupervised. The culture at the time in my area was very much that the internet wasn’t for kids.