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I remember spending my entire allowance on floppy disks just so I could download Abandonware on the local internet cafe. Getting home with maybe 10 megabytes worth of junk seemed like the stuff of legends (particularly because nothing ever reached such sizes on the internet at the time).
Then, months later, I heard that free web hosting provider "FortuneCity" had doubled their free plan, taking it from 10 megabytes of space to 20, and there were even talks about them getting it all the way up to an unthinkable three digits (which they did, much later, when it was no longer that impressive). I had my own website hosted on something called "Webcindario" at the time (what a mouthful to add after my URL -- no wonder no-one ever visited XD) and they didn't offer nearly as much space at first, so seeing that was mind-blowing.
But, to me, the biggest "woah" moment came when Gmail launched and offered us ONE GIGABYTE of space (!). I was always having to play "triage" with my inbox on Hotmail because they didn't offer nearly enough space to keep all those awesome little PowerPoints we used to spam each other with, and suddenly someone was offering more than a CD-ROM worth of storage to dickhead kids so long as they managed to get an invitation for the service?! That, my friends, was the most awesomely ridiculous thing I had ever witnessed... and so early into my own internet journey, too.
Funny to think that we can now buy SD Cards with several times that size for basically nothing and that our phones, computers and free plans can easily offer much more storage by default these days.
But back then, when we uploaded Microsoft FrontPage Express pages to a rickety server using a screaming 56K connection, being very careful not to make them too pretty (lest that one super detailed image of MegaMan would come back to haunt us)? Yeah, that was night and day.
Ironically, though, I think that that actually taught us some discipline, too: prioritize uploads, get your files off-site; learn how to compress everything just right. Back-up what you can't directly keep... It was certainly a thought exercise, and one that was set up by an arbitrary number and our need to respect it.
Don't miss it at all, but it added a layer that made the whole thing feel more unique and rewarding when done right.
/Rant over ;D
Then, months later, I heard that free web hosting provider "FortuneCity" had doubled their free plan, taking it from 10 megabytes of space to 20, and there were even talks about them getting it all the way up to an unthinkable three digits (which they did, much later, when it was no longer that impressive). I had my own website hosted on something called "Webcindario" at the time (what a mouthful to add after my URL -- no wonder no-one ever visited XD) and they didn't offer nearly as much space at first, so seeing that was mind-blowing.
But, to me, the biggest "woah" moment came when Gmail launched and offered us ONE GIGABYTE of space (!). I was always having to play "triage" with my inbox on Hotmail because they didn't offer nearly enough space to keep all those awesome little PowerPoints we used to spam each other with, and suddenly someone was offering more than a CD-ROM worth of storage to dickhead kids so long as they managed to get an invitation for the service?! That, my friends, was the most awesomely ridiculous thing I had ever witnessed... and so early into my own internet journey, too.
Funny to think that we can now buy SD Cards with several times that size for basically nothing and that our phones, computers and free plans can easily offer much more storage by default these days.
But back then, when we uploaded Microsoft FrontPage Express pages to a rickety server using a screaming 56K connection, being very careful not to make them too pretty (lest that one super detailed image of MegaMan would come back to haunt us)? Yeah, that was night and day.
Ironically, though, I think that that actually taught us some discipline, too: prioritize uploads, get your files off-site; learn how to compress everything just right. Back-up what you can't directly keep... It was certainly a thought exercise, and one that was set up by an arbitrary number and our need to respect it.
Don't miss it at all, but it added a layer that made the whole thing feel more unique and rewarding when done right.
/Rant over ;D
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