Jurassic Web

It’s 1996, and you’re bored. What do you do? If you’re one of the lucky people with an AOL account, you probably do the same thing you’d do in 2009: Go online. Crank up your modem, wait 20 seconds as you log in, and there you are–”Welcome.” You check your mail, then spend a few minutes chatting with your AOL buddies about which of you has the funniest screen name (you win, pimpodayear94).

Then you load up Internet Explorer, AOL’s default Web browser. Now what? There’s no YouTube, Digg, Huffington Post, or Gawker. There’s no Google (GOOG), Twitter, Facebook, or Wikipedia. A few newspapers and magazines have begun to put their articles online—you can visit the New York Times or Time—and there are a handful of new Web-only publications, including Feed, HotWired, Salon, Suck, Urban Desires, Word, and, launched in June, Slate. But these sites aren’t very big, and they don’t hold your interest for long. People still refer to the new medium by its full name—the World Wide Web—and although you sometimes find interesting stuff here, you’re constantly struck by how little there is to do. You rarely linger on the Web; your computer takes about 30 seconds to load each page, and, hey, you’re paying for the Internet by the hour. Plus, you’re tying up the phone line. Ten minutes after you log in, you shut down your modem. You’ve got other things to do—after all, a new episode of “Seinfeld” is on.

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comments so far. Add yours.

  • Steve Zinn

    Quit it! Quit it! You’re making me all misty eyed for the good old days.

    Actually, I recall “wasting” a lot of time on the internet, and on the proprietary services, looking for info on PCs and software – to buy, to fix, etc.

  • http://fishbowl.pastiche.org/ Charles Miller

    What an absolutely terrible article.

    “In 1996, the Internet was the nascent World Wide Web, and AOL. Nothing else existed, therefore there was nothing to do.”

    As a student who pretty much “lived online” in 1996, I’m left wondering what it was the occupied most of my waking hours… Oh yes! All those things that _weren’t_ AOL or the web!

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