• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    3
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Bro that’s anecdotally false, there were so many ham, electronics and random research sites I perused on angelfire and geocities.

    Quality varied greatly, but lots of thought went into making posts, diagrams were sometimes done in ASCII art which was its own headache.

    Point is, I don’t agree with your take, and I don’t think my similarly aged friends would agree either. Internet of late 90s/y2k wasn’t an ad-free utopia, but the point was more about conversing and sharing info.

    Lemmy is an attempt to return to that original intent, modernized as it must be.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      12 years ago

      You may want to give “HAM radio forums” a Google.

      I don’t care if you agree. I care what’s correct. The Internet is many times larger than I was 20+ years ago, and all the same free networks exist. The really popular ones got big and monetized.

      That’s just how success works with anything.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        22 years ago

        Hmm? Your argument and thinking processes both seem clouded.

        Ham radio forums still exist, as they previously did. Did you miss the gist, that information exchange was more of a prime focus vs making money by cramming ads everywhere? Obviously yes.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          12 years ago

          Except it isn’t, and all those resources exist for free.

          The Internet was once a niche space as a whole and now it is a large, omnipresent space with more niche spaces than before

          It’s really not complicated. This is just Boomer Humor for millennials.