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What was your first experience using the Internet?

For me, my Dad brought home a laptop from work and we looked up pictures of pokemon and went to the Simpsons website, circa around 1999. How about you?

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  • When we got our first IBM compatible PC (a 486) my father wanted to have a modem in it. His friend who sold it to him couldn't fathom why he would want a modem. But of course he got it anyways.

    In the beginning my father used it for online banking over BTX. And when my brother got his own PC a few years later we played Doom with the modems over our house's internal telephone lines.

    My actual first internet experience was reading and writing to newsgroups on Usenet. (that worked more or less the same as Lemmy) My posts can probably still be found in archives. I mostly hung out in de.rec.sf.starwars. That's actually how I found my first girlfriend.

    Besides that I also surfed the web for different stuff. I still remember how Google became popular because it wasn't so weighed down by ads and clutter and it actually gave you much better results than Alta Vista or Yahoo.

  • My first memories were just getting the damn thing working. We had to add RAM to our Packard Bell 486 and buy a modem. Getting email working on it was a chore but that was for my parents so I did not care until Hotmail came out a few months later when I could get my own. Then I essentially signed up for spam. I read a lot of PC World and looked through Yahoo's categorized websites which were a lot of Geocity sites. I'd use WebCrawler to search for SimCity 2000 sites and since I was 12, boobs. That last one was risky because closing Netscape Navigator took a good minute to close out so there was no quick switching to something else if someone walked in. I would also hit up chat rooms and forums, generally PC or N64 related ones. Many of those probably should have had a lot more moderation than they did. I think I remember Tom's Hardware's chatroom/forum exposing me to things that a 12 year old and even adults should probably not be exposed to.

    Overall, there was a lot less moderation and a lot less centralization. You had to seek out what you were looking for because there was not a ton of tracking and your interests would not be constantly bombarding you and reinforcing your views.

  • Being into marvel superheros, i tried spiderman.com, and it brought mento a spiderman website. pretty straight forward i thought. next i wanted to see xmen stuff, but i typed in xman. there was a big difference between xmen.com and xman.com

  • It was around the mid/late 90s. Maybe around 96 or 97, so I would've been 9 or 10. We had a computer at home, and my brother and I played games on it, but we didn't have Internet. One day, my dad who works in IT, installed AOL and on our computer and paid for it. And he set up an account for me and showed me how to use it. And I was blown away. Eventually. even though I was a kid, I'd hang out in Star Trek chatrooms, created mailing lists for like a kids writers club, and ofc started playing online games. Eventually even had my own website on like GeoCities, handcrafted in HTML.

  • Prodigy dial-up. I was maybe in 4th grade. I checked out some online games they had, available as a part of their gateway. One was a graphical door/room game. I died almost immediately.

  • Usenet, email and MUDs via my universities remote UNIX terminals.

    This was at the time of Mosaic and Netscape navigator, but honestly, at that point, there wasn't enough on the web to keep me coming back, so I spent my time on Usenet and MUDs instead of studying :P

  • Learning how to find flash games, then memes, then real games, then it all went down hill when I found my way to 4chan as a kid.

  • If Gopher counts, 1993, downloading Wayne’s World and Ren & Stimpy clips at the university’s biochemistry lab on a Mac IIsi. Otherwise 1996, looking up Green Day lyrics on Webcrawler.com and posting on Usenet from a Sun SPARCstation in the computer lab.

  • It was around 1991 in the university computer lab. Just a green screen dumb terminal for email and newsgroups. Played too much Nettrek after hours on the Spark workstations later on.

  • Playing flash games on cartoon network and nickelodeon. Not long after, my uncle exposed me to newgrounds. Good times.

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