Yahoo Shuttering Its Web Directory 116
An anonymous reader writes You may or may not remember this, but before the advent of reliable search engines, web listings used to be a popular way to organize the web. Yahoo had one of the more popular hierarchical website directories around. On Friday, as part of its on-going streamlining process, Yahoo announced that their 20-year-old web directory will be no more: "While we are still committed to connecting users with the information they're passionate about, our business has evolved and at the end of 2014 (December 31), we will retire the Yahoo Directory."
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I pay yahoo $19/year for email, that way my emails do not get lost and account deactivated - they used to deactivate a lot in the past, like 8 years ago, after like 90 days of inactivity. Also exchange of consideration, paying them, means they are sort of responsible not to lose my emails, which is complicated territory when you use their service for free. I used to have various email addresses that needed constant updating, at first from my college, then from various dialup isp's, but by the time I switche
Re:Webmail (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously.. It's called the Enter/Return key. Read up about it..
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...Yahoo is my shitbox.
This, exactly. I use Yahoo accounts as spam-catchers - I don't even use spam filtering on my 'real' email address, as I don't need it.
...they finally permanently retired the "Web 1.0" interface which was faster, showed more mails and allowed to open them in tabs...
AdBlock and NoScript fix that crap to a large extent. It's annoying to have to click on the 'proceed without updating JavaScript' link every time I log in, and it's annoying to have to temporarily re-enable JS when I want to send an attachment; but the result is an interface that is (just barely) useable, and devoid of ads. If I couldn't turn off all the shitty 'features' tha
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I've stuck with Yahoo the same reasons; plus, I find the GMail interface to be not much better than the stock Yahoo interface.
Why are you reading GMail and Yahoo mail in a web browser instead of in a proper e-mail client over IMAP?
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Linux is dying thanks to systemd. (Score:1, Insightful)
Hipsters and advertisers haven't just killed the web. They're doing their best to kill Linux, too. They've already managed to destroy Firefox, and GNOME 3 killed the GNOME project for all intents and purposes. Now they've moved on to the core of Linux itself, by forcing systemd on everybody who uses Linux. There's going to be a serious migration away from Linux coming in the near future, I'm sad to say. Some will go to Windows and OS X, with others moving to the BSDs. FreeBSD, whether they know it or not, i
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They Hadn't Already? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't think Yahoo was ever top dog search?
I remember switching from Altavista to Google sometime around 98/99. WebCrawler before that? Yahoo is one of those companies I've never understood why people used their products. Or, for that matter, how they're still around today.
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Google was also a winner for me because of its clean single line text input for search. No images, no clutter, no links on the page - in the age of a 9600 baud modem the less clutter on the page the better. That was why *I* swapped from alta-vista to google. Alta-vista had started presenting a 'portal page' which was all the rage back then, and I preferred the quick, efficient search from google.
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I wonder what baud a 28.8Kbps modem ran at? By that point I think they had shifted to phase modulation instead of ampltude modulation, and were probably using 2-3 bits per symbol (90* or 45* phase shift increments), which would put the signal rate at either 14400 or 9600 baud. Of course you couldn't go *advertising* it that way and expect to sell upgrades, which is no doubt why modem labelling changed from baud to bps at around that time.
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Holy crap, 7 bits per symbol? That's insane! I wish I had a use for trellis modulation - at a thousand-fold reduction in uncorrectable stream errors it sounds quite impressive, but I can't quite wrap my head around it i a brief survey, and I'm not going to sit down and puzzle it out without having some sort of application.
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Ugh. it did make websites and email load slightly faster, but on-the-fly compression is worse than useless when downloading files that have already been heavily compressed by more domain-optimized algorithms, like graphics and zipped files. Basically everything of any size you'd normally be downloading is essentially incompressible. And you can't read text at anywhere near even 56kbs anyway.
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Yep (Score:2, Insightful)
Tablet focused design has ruined the web
Re:Yep (Score:4, Insightful)
Tablet focused design has ruined the web
Nah; the people who still use the web haven't seen much of anything "ruined". They see the web they've long seen, just with a larger set of web sites each month, and maybe a few new features in their browsers. It's just the suckers that succumb to the vendors' enticements into their Walled Gardens that think things have changed. If they'd install a decent browser (in addition to the crippled browser that came with their tablets), they'd see that the web is chugging along as it always has, some parts of it good and other parts not so good.
The fact that the marketers have pushed their New! Improved! products for small, portable computers doesn't mean that the old products have suddenly lost their capabilities. It just means that some of the customers have been persuaded to switch to other things that may or may not be any better.
The biggest problem with "the web" from a tablet user's viewpoint is all the old sites built by "designers" who haven't yet learned that their sites need to work on whatever screen the visitor has, including the small screens that so many people are carrying around now. The days are past when a site designer could design only for people with screens as big as the fancy one sitting on the designer's desktop. If your site doesn't work on the small screens, you won't attract many of the billion or so people who weren't using the web 5 years ago, but are now.
This isn't the fault of "tablet focused design"; it's a problem caused by designers' contempt for people with such small, cheap and portable equipment. They've been essentially anti-tablet since before tablets even existed. But they're slowly coming around, as they slowly realize how crappy their sites really are, from the viewpoint of most newcomers to the Internet.
(Actually, the web has always worked a lot better if you consciously avoid sites created by "designers". Those built by people with an engineer's concern for usability have always been a lot more useful, and they tend to work pretty well on tablets, phones, etc. The "designers" usually don't think they look pretty. But people continue to use google a lot, for example, despite its blatant lack of "design". Or maybe because of it. ;-)
Safari monopoly (Score:5, Interesting)
If they'd install a decent browser (in addition to the crippled browser that came with their tablets)
That would require buying a second noon-iPad tablet on which to run a non-crippled browser. Because the iOS API lacks support for runtime generation of executable code, all browsers in Apple's App Store are either Safari wrappers or, in the case of Opera Mini, remote desktop viewers.
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If they'd install a decent browser (in addition to the crippled browser that came with their tablets)
That would require buying a second noon-iPad tablet on which to run a non-crippled browser. Because the iOS API lacks support for runtime generation of executable code, all browsers in Apple's App Store are either Safari wrappers or, in the case of Opera Mini, remote desktop viewers.
So which case describes Chrome? I have it installed on an iPad, and it lacks most of the "walled garden" flakinesses of Safari, pretty much doing things the way browsers on non-Apple systems do them. Thus, Safari balks when you try to get it to display a PDF in a page, but Chrome does it like you'd expect, and sometimes even sizes it to its container correctly. Safari can display PDFs ok, if it's the only thing in a tab, but if you try to surround a PDF "object" with HTML, Safari flatly refuses, showin
Re:Safari monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
Safari wrapper. http://www.howtogeek.com/184283/why-third-party-browsers-will-always-be-inferior-to-safari-on-iphone-and-ipad/ [howtogeek.com] has you covered...
HTML5 features that Apple left out (Score:2)
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Maybe up until a year or so ago. Now websites are converting to the Metro interface, which prefers splashy pictures over descriptive text. Those bookmarks get deleted (nbcnews.com anyone?)
In addition more an
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Bingo. One of the Web's biggest problems has always been "it's just like print" types who create static layouts that fit only within the biggest screen they can lay hold of, and the rest of the world be damned.
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I still remember people in 1996 asking me how to change the user's screen res using JavaScript so "they can view my site correctly" and getting all bent out of shape when I tried to explain to them why this was a horrible idea (and not allowed in any case).
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Actually, the web has always worked a lot better if you consciously avoid sites created by "designers"
So, no Slashdot Beta then...
Re:Moderation (Score:2)
Wohoo! I got informative + insightful + flamebait mods for my message! That's one of the mods I've been trying for for years (plus the rare chance to use "for" twice in a row).
Now to see if I can achieve the ultimate: getting "funny" along with flamebait and (informative or insightful). Preferably all four, though I'd wonder if that's actually achievable if you start with 2 points.
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It should be possible since Flamebait is a -1.
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anyone else have the periodic table of the www? (Score:2)
I'd take a photo (I'm really sad I think in having a hard copy which I've had in a frame since 1997, on my wall) and upload it, but I'm sure there'll still be a copy online somewhere. It's easy to distinguish between it and the 2007 version, myspace isn't in there. Slashdot's still there in group 9, tho (so's Chips N Dips which is odd, since they're the same site).
downloadable content (Score:2)
Nostalgic about oil lamps? (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously, no hand-edited directory has been able to keep pace with WWW content for... ten years now? fifteen?
For those who don't mind the lag: DMOZ - the Open Directory Project [dmoz.org].
Re:Nostalgic about oil lamps? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yahoo wasn't keeping up when it was brand new. I remember using Yahoo when Mosaic, compiled from sources by yourself, was the recommended procedure for installing a web browser on my workstation at work. Yahoo wasn't keeping up even at that time.
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Soft Spot for Yahoo Directory (Score:5, Interesting)
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Should've picked the meth, its less reliably destructive to your social life...
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Yeah, for a few years back there, i was constantly amazed at what was on the web. That would have been a bit over 10 years ago and there was hardly anything compared to what's there today. I've been using the web for 20 years now and i can barely imagine (let alone remember) what life was like before everything was online.
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Nostalgia gone awry (Score:2)
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Why be nostalogic? Slavery's still going strong, even here in the supposed land of the free. Not nearly so openly as it once was, but human trafficking is still a major issue that ruins a lot of people's lives.
And that's even before you consider things like wage-slaving and non-human slavery (there's a reason they call it "breaking" a horse - that's generally exactly what you have to do to its spirit)
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Lot of US fud there. As for the horses, you're apparently unaware of current horse training methods. Or... more fud.
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Keep believing that, just be sure to avoid any of the various organizations documenting the ongoing existence of human trafficking in the US. It's illegal, and not as bad as in some places in the world, but there are in fact people buying and selling sex slaves, etc. in this country (prostitution, especially of children, being one of the areas where profits are sufficient to justify the legal risks).
As for horses - training methods have improved, but the end result is still shaping the mind of a willfull a
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Same. I remember when I got my resume listed there back in the mid nineties. You had to post it, and because it had to be accepted, there was just a tiny bit of "you're in the club". It was a bit of geek cred (that and posting it to Dice back when they still had you use telnet).
Cool Yahoo, a phrase not much heard now, a term of days long gone.
$299 for a Directory Listing (annual fee) (Score:1)
I'm sure anybody who just paid $299 for a Yahoo Directory Listing will be delighted with this news .......
Meh, I want my infoseek (Score:1)
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Does ayone actually use that? I never feel lucky enough - the page I actually want is usually halfway down the list.
Search wins over directories (Score:1)
Maintaining a web directory is like keeping nicely pruned and organized browser bookmarks: nobody does it anymore. Keyword search is good enough in both cases.
Unreliable sources (Score:2)
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Google's page rank algorithm goes a long way to mitigate that by tracking how many links refer to a given site, but of course Google needs to be vigilant of abuse.
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No. Popularity is a horrible indicator of usefulness, and/or accuracy and/or value. A well curated directory, on the other hand, can be all wheat, no chaff. Unfortunately, no well-curated directory exists.
RIP (Score:3)
Oh, who am I kidding? The modern version kicks the old one's ass seven ways to Sunday. I've been an Internet user for over twenty years. Yahoo was amazing at the time, but Moore's Law reigns supreme, and thank FSM for that. akebono.stanford.edu, anyone?
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Came for akebono.stanford.edu, leaving happy.
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We don't speak of DejaNews?
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Bummer (Score:1)
I kind of miss it, and had forgot it was around.
It was kind of a big influence on me, as I hacked a perl script together to take a netscape bookmark file and turn it into something resembling the Yahoo directory.
Web Directories Became Social Bookmarking, etc. (Score:4, Insightful)
I think web directories still exist, they are just slightly less centralized and usually have some gimmick or domain attached. There's still a single authority in charge, but the directories are simply in the hands of the users, which in turn is aggregated per-site.
Examples: Pinterest, Delicious, Reddit (to a point), StumbleUpon, Pearltrees, Kifi, Scoop.it, etc.
Most of these are simply bookmarks or a curated directory. IMO, just about the same thing, only differing on presentation. Amazing how people continually reinvent something and declare it genius. At best, we've seen refinement, more or less efficient UI, and attached search capabilities.
As for those who think full-text search can replace curation, I think you're sadly mistaken. Spend a few weeks really researching search engines, ranking, SEO, language processing, parsers, etc. and you'll find that anything remotely resembling Google's approach is full of problems and challenges. I believe it is impossible to say that one is better than another. I see search as part of a larger whole that includes curation, text, semantic, pattern matching, structural, and other kinds of search techniques combined. It really just depends on the actor's use cases:
Can you quickly find what you're looking for via text search?
Do You know the exact terms and filters for your search?
Do you need recommendations or suggestions?
Do you need to work your way forwards or backwards?
Do you need to pivot on the results?
There are many more questions and answering these influences what is best for you. I think it's a mistake to say directory/bookmarks are useless for these reasons.
What, exactly, does Yahoo still do? (Score:5, Insightful)
What does Yahoo still do, anyway?
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Force long-time remote workers to choose between moving to another city where they can actually come into an office and losing their jobs.
So, what do I win?
What, exactly, does Yahoo still do? (Score:1)
Email for those with legacy addresses, games, some media that they bought out several years ago (ref: broadcast.com), non-technical people like their news and homepage for some strange reason, and they are still relevant in overseas markets.
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Duh, they buy startups.
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Fantasy Sports.
Ali-bye-bye (Score:2)
WTF is the word shuttering? (Score:1)
What the hell is wrong with the word "shutting"?
No problem (Score:2)
There's always AltaVista.
Yahoo (Score:1)