what will really blow your mind is that thirty years from now some wise-ass will do the same with hackernews, and everyone will laugh at how shitty it looked, and that this is the group that built $10 billion companies from nothing but scrappiness, making something people want, and shipping.<p>Let's admit it. HN is not a highly polished web UI - there's not even thread collapsing. It works because it doesn't matter; we're communicating and sharing wisdom.<p>And for you wise-asses from the future: THIS IS NOT THE BEST WE CAN DO IN TERMS OF UI. Just like there were cutting-edge films in 1984 with lots of visual effects, we could have a much richer interface today if we wanted. We're not primitive - we don't care! In fact, future wise-ass, what have YOU built today? Why not pick a problem and solve it rather than snickering at the ancient past :)
I wasn't born then, so I don't know how frequently the recent posts change. I thought I'd share this for posterity.<p>As sad as the post is, I think it really highlights how much the world has changed in just a generation. I hope our kids look back at the world of today with similar distaste. We still have a long way to go.<p><a href="http://article.olduse.net/52@decwrl.UUCP" rel="nofollow">http://article.olduse.net/52@decwrl.UUCP</a>
As a person who wasn't even born at the time USENET was popular, I've found this service very interesting. I was quite surprised when I found one of my current college professors posting in net.jokes!<p>If you like this website, you may also enjoy <a href="http://www.textfiles.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.textfiles.com/</a>, a huge collection of old text documents from the early net (especially BBSes).
So I'm counting 832 concurrent users in the shared screen session running the news reader on the front page there. I expect that might be getting a little slow. I've spun up a few more instances to spead the load around.
I remember there was a time period not too long ago when the calendar lined up* with the one from like 1989 or 1992 something like that and 2600 started releasing a bunch of their editors old radio shows from that year as a weekly podcast - as if on a ~decade "delay".<p>I usually only pop on one of their podcasts when I'm really bored, but I followed most of that while it was happening because of an interesting effect. For some reason hearing about stuff from the past on the same calendar day and day of week just really made you connect to it more.<p>I saw this the other day too, and bookmarked it because it brought that cool feeling back. It's a really neat idea imo.<p>* lined up in terms of days of the week - so if the 3rd of March was a Monday the one year, it was the other too
I love that font. The VT220 was one of the first terminals I used for an extended period of time, and I've been using the font on one of my machines for over a year now for that extra nostalgic feeling...
I'm hoping there is a startup that modernise Usenet and put a nice UX on top, similar to what Slack has done to irc. Why should Reddit has all the fun?
USENET was really the first service I used in 1988 that showed me what this whole internet things was about. It was so amazing posting messages and seeing replies from all over the map. The first distributed social network, shame it all went to heck.