The Original mcom.com Revived 137
saccade.com writes "For those of you that missed the emergence of the the World
Wide Web the first time around, Mozilla co-founder JWZ
has recreated it for you. In honor of Mozilla's tenth anniversary, he's recreated
the original home.mcom.com
sites in all their 1994 glory. He even has vintage
browsers to go with them."
Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, and good job, Slashdotters. The page is down already!
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Funny)
(Seriously, it looks like the web server is patched to feed data as if you were on a slow dialup ...)
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ahh simpler times. Plain text with just two or three images (resembling a newspaper). Not like today's pages that seem to take forever to load because they are so overburdened with a lot of junk.
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Worst example: imdb.com - Why does this site insist upon loading 1000 K of flash movie on every page??? Grrr. Not dialup friendly.
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Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:4, Informative)
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Srsly, at one moment I thought I did read "java".
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Although, if they went and screwed with anything there and lost some transcripts or student schedules, Old Main would burn.
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It did not exist when I was a Penn State student (1997). If it's vintage, it's in style only, but in reality it's a 2000-era page.
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If you want actual sites, visit one of the web archives and take a look at places like www.psu.edu or www.scifi.com - you'll
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http://www.allegromedia.com/sugi/penguin/ [allegromedia.com]
To quote:
I had to post the link here given the topic and that it has to do with penguins.
Hilarious site, and has a lot of the same "mosaic feel" as the original home.mcom.com (not to mention frames with nice, fat borders for resizing!).
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Look at how "narrow" the page is. All of the graphics were designed to fit inside a 640x480 monitor from the early 1990s. Ya know, somebody ought to start an archive to capture and preserve vintage sites from pre-1999. It could be very educational someday to show future programmers how the Web looked when it was still a toddler.
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, and good job, Slashdotters. The page is down already!
Naah, they're just re-creating the experience of websurfing on a 14.4 modem.
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I was... still godawful slow.
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Interesting)
In 1995 I was surfing the net with a 2.4 k modem. I had to select "don't load images" but it was still possible to visit my favorite sites like scifi.com even at that slow speed. If I would have had your Sporster modem (~20 times faster) I probably would have been in heaven!
Today I still use a 56k modem while traveling. With image compression the 56k is almost as fast as my 700k DSL w/o compression.
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Ouch. I had an AT&T 14.4, and that was pretty standard around my scene.
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The reason I was still using a 2.4 kbit/s modem in 1994 is because I was a college student and didn't have any money to buy a faster 9.6 or 14.4 model. Plus my parents were not convinced I needed a faster model, so it was obvious
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My first dialup computer was a Commodore 64 with a 300 baud Vicmodem - the one where you manually dial the phone, unplug your handset's cord, and plug it into the modem. I think I can still dial half those BBSes from muscle memory. :-)
One of my prized possessions in the early 90s was a Supra 2400 baud modem card for my Amiga 2000. I suspect much of our BBSing experience was pretty similar.
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In 95 my dorm was fitted with ethernet.
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- Commodore Amiga 500
- phone jack
- 2 k modem
It was slow but it worked, and it allowed me to continue using the Web to look-up television schedules and/or chat with people online. Aside: (Googlegroups still has some of my public messages dating back to 1988! Wow. I guess the web's not as ephemeral as I thought.)
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:4, Funny)
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(shakes the magic wikipedia): "All signs point to yes." Okay.
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Finally (Score:2)
Re:Ahh, the days.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't blame the users, blame the technology!
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If only our modern browsers supported client-side load balancing like they did in the good old days.
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Speaking of which, I recently bought a toaster that has a higher processing speed than my first computer. Sort of depressing, actually.
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Good think I still have ... (Score:2)
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HYPE tag. (Score:5, Interesting)
Does anyone know? Google reveals nothing on the subject.
Re:HYPE tag. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:HYPE tag. (Score:5, Funny)
It was removed later 'for great justice'.
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Re:HYPE tag. (Score:5, Interesting)
The tag played a sound clip of Marca saying "What is Global Hypermedia?"
I'll stay mum about the why.
Bandwidth (Score:5, Interesting)
A flashback to the way I first encountered the web.
Of course, it's probably even slower today, now that it's linked here.
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The best part is the bandwidth throttling, back to 1994 dial-up speeds. I was looking at this yesterday, and it was weird to watch the interlaced GIFs load line by line. (Remember how Netscape used to have a LOWSRC attribute for images, so you could specify a low-res version that could be loaded quickly and displayed while it tried to download the massive, whopping 50K full image?)
I remember switching to Netscape very early because it would load images asynchronously, rather than waiting for everything to be loaded before showing me any of it (what NCSA Mosaic used to do at that time). Of course, we now get that sort of annoyance anyway due to the vast gobs of (terrible) javascript inflicted upon us by websites and (especially) advertisers. (Which is one reason why I use NoScript; I don't mind ads too much, but don't slow down my browsing just to show them to me!)
Of course, I can al
Enough of this Acid3 nonsense... (Score:2)
Re:Enough of this Acid3 nonsense... (Score:5, Funny)
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That's not bandwidth throttling (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately, it seems to be running on Netsite.
Re:That's not bandwidth throttling (Score:5, Interesting)
:) Netsite evolved into the Netscape Enterprise Server and I was there at Netscape when the web site cluster served over 100 million hits per day in 1996. Those were amazing times, many server manufacturers would bring in hardware and we would benchmark a portion of www.netscape.com's traffic on them, which usually led to discussions about how to tune or optimize the OS or the IP stack, I know we helped SGI at the time.
The server and software engineering folks helped develop a dynamic DNS server that would help globally load balance web traffic based upon the inquiring IP address. They also helped hack SSL into rsync back in the day, so that is how we securely published web content updates out to the cluster.
Sadly, we also pioneering web advertising at Netscape. My colleague Alan spec'd out the dimensions to the ad banners, in case you wondered where those 460x68 dimensions came from: it allowed a minimal amount of horizontal white space on each side of the web page when the web browser had a vertical scroll bar on a 640x480 laptop display running Navigator, IIRC.
So those ad banners were physically changed on the docroot via a cron script in order to rotate them. The joy of hacks in a funded start up, but it made money! In fact, unlike most corporations today (e.g.: Microsoft), there was a strategic decision *not* to create an advertising server, so we helped create an industry and did not compete in it. Well, didn't complete until TW/AOL acquired Netscape -- but that was the day Netscape really died (it could be argued that bought Netscape solely for our web site traffic and advertising revenue since they didn't know what to do with the browser and server software. Witness the eventual release of the browser software to the mozilla.org project (thanks also to jwz!) and iPlanet/Sun eventually selling the server line to Red Hat, who continues to open source the directory and certificate servers today).
I wrote the plug-in finder, could it have been the most used CGI on the web at the time in 1996 -- who knows? I went on to become a technology evangelist at Netscape.
Good days indeed, thanks for the memories!
Next up (Score:3, Funny)
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1994's anti-slashdotting technology (Score:2, Interesting)
Running about as fast as 28.8k (Score:2, Redundant)
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Is it just me? (Score:3, Funny)
When it's not Slashdotted ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Modern web developers could take a lesson from this.
Re:When it's not Slashdotted ... (Score:5, Interesting)
One of the major reasons why on every site that still halfway works with it, I still use (are you sitting down?) Netscape v3, is because it strips most of the sheer JUNK, making web speeds tolerable. The same page can take 10x as long to load in Mozilla (not only because Moz is SLOW to render, but also because of all the JUNK).
IMO, NS3 is still the best, most stable, fastest, and most bug-free of all browsers. It's too bad source code is not available (I asked JWZ about that a while back, he said he'd tried to get it and no joy) as if user-optionable modern features were implemented atop this fast, lean old browser, we'd really HAVE something.
Don't use Netscape 3. Seriously. (Score:3, Informative)
They are both amazingly fast.
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Yes, it has its virtues, among them that it operates entirely in RAM, leaving no traces behind when you close it, and it will run from a floppy. Nice to carry in your pocket.
But I use it very seldom, as the interface fails me in numerous ways, not least of which is the inability to parse anything but fully qualified URLs. Way too many little irritations like that to be usable except as a last resort. Tho it does sometimes handle ugly H
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As I recall, back when Netscape wanted to make their browser open source, the big issue was dealing with various 3rd-party libraries that were used (and not interested in giving away their product).
That's why they decided to create Mozilla as a ground-up implementation.
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Of course the trouble with the rebuild from the ground up is that it threw away all the lean functionality of old NS3. ISTM they'd have been better off to strip out the 3rd party code and rebuild just THOSE parts, rather than try to start over entirely (thus losing their formerly dominant marketsha
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Slashdotted, indeed (Score:2)
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the /. effect, 1994-style (Score:5, Funny)
Serously AOL (Score:2)
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TimeWarner, let go of mcom - you're rich enough. (Score:2)
Cool... (Score:2)
NCSA Mosaic 1.0.3/Mac chokes on the site (Score:4, Interesting)
Since I already have a copy of NCSA Mosaic copyrighted 1-27-1994, I decided to fire that up and load the page.
A screenshot [flickr.com] of mosaic.mcom.com that I was finally able to load. It had issues with some of the
This is Mosaic v1.0.3 under System 7.6.1, running in BasiliskII.
Strange timing. Just last night I started playing around with some gopher servers, so I fired up Basilisk and downloaded TurboGopher. I got my first access to Usenet feeds in about 1992, and was able to get more online in the fall of 1993. Gopher, FTP, and email were huge. I remember downloading Mosaic sometime in early spring of 1994 and playing around with it.
Ahh, the memories...
Re:NCSA Mosaic 1.0.3/Mac chokes on the site (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, one day I came across this image [wikipedia.org] and my brain just about exploded. Keep in mind that I was a high school aged male. Yep, that was the beginning of the end for me...
As for the "web", I remember an MIT postdoc excitedly showing me this new "world wide web browser called Mosaic", and he just couldn't get me enthused. "You mean it's read-only?" I remember asking. I just couldn't see the point.
Code rot (Score:2)
I tried the earliest windows version (mosaic04.exe). It runs on wine without problem. Unfortunately it is impossible to load any page. I tried a variety of sites (google, yahoo, slashdot,
Next I tried the earliest linux version (netscape.i486-unknown-linux.B093). You cannot even run it on a modern dist
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On a more serious note, blockout (1989) works out of the box on a current windows machine. No patch, no special config, no nothing. These browsers do not. That is all that really matters. Of course you can tweak the web server,grab old libraries and what not to coerce them into working. My point is that you shouldn't need to.
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W3C has done a good job upholding compatibility despite the feature push of the browser wars. Try out browsers that are a little newer and you'll still be able to surf the web. You may have to look into the html code fro
Good ol' Mozilla 0.9 (Score:2)
mosaic.com stolen by Netscape lawyers (Score:2)
The funny thing is the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) NCSA lawyers made Mosaic Communications change their name (eventually Netscape), because Mosaic was a
!slashdotted (Score:2)
Anyone else shocked? (Score:2)
JWZ did not co-found Mosaic Communications Corp (Score:2)
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Gopher link still works (Score:2)
More old browsers (Score:2)
Better than myspace (Score:2)
Nice :) (Score:2)
Oh Internet, I weep for thee! What happened?
Re:Rickrolled? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:where are the ponies? (Score:4, Interesting)
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