Old'aVista – The most powerful guide to the old Internet
Posted by abnercoimbre 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by Svip 21 hours ago
> The name of the website itself is a wordplay on Altavista.
Though, the creator mentions on his own page, that he is a German citizen (due to his grandfather), even though he speaks no German and have never lived there[1]; which could mean that pun is intentional. Not that it is really all that important (like not at all), but I can't help but wonder now...
Comment by jstanley 19 hours ago
Comment by Svip 11 hours ago
Comment by dieselgate 8 hours ago
It's ironic to search for "alt meaning" and find a tertiary definition of "Pitched in the first octave above the treble staff; high" which would suggest more of the Spanish "alta" root rather than the Germanic root.
Now I'm curious how much origins are shared between Spanish and German.
Perhaps we can all agree English is a goofy language!
Comment by WorldMaker 7 hours ago
Both of which also suggest to me other ways to try to have made the wordplay in Old'aVista even cleaner if it was an intentional multilingual wordplay. "Ale-a-Vista" might have been silly or "AuldaVista" might have been funnier.
Comment by Mallory_Ringess 13 hours ago
Comment by MostlyStable 19 hours ago
Comment by vidarh 18 hours ago
(Of course the alta in Altavista is from Spanish "high", but that doesn't really change anything)
Comment by HelloNurse 17 hours ago
Comment by walletdrainer 19 hours ago
They did admit to being German.
Comment by xhkkffbf 10 hours ago
Comment by rubyn00bie 19 hours ago
Sites like this remind me the internet used to be fun, and it was glorious. Really, makes me want to bust out Frontpage 2000 and Macromedia Fireworks to build a sweet landing page for an anime fan site and setup some phpBB forums.
Comment by WorldMaker 7 hours ago
Comment by taintlord22 12 hours ago
Comment by tonylucas 16 hours ago
Comment by KevinMS 15 hours ago
Comment by rolph 9 hours ago
Comment by reconnecting 19 hours ago
It doesn't work properly in my Netscape Navigator.
Comment by mattoxic 21 hours ago
Comment by Terr_ 3 hours ago
Comment by NamlchakKhandro 20 hours ago
Comment by dang 22 hours ago
Old'aVista, a Guide to the Old Internet - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39069910 - Jan 2024 (12 comments)
Comment by blfr 20 hours ago
Comment by qubex 1 day ago
Comment by schemathings 6 hours ago
Comment by rbanffy 18 hours ago
Comment by sourcecodeplz 18 hours ago
Comment by rbanffy 18 hours ago
Comment by pelasaco 18 hours ago
Comment by Fizz43 15 hours ago
Comment by DaanDL 14 hours ago
Comment by thm 12 hours ago
Comment by rolph 9 hours ago
the original OG's were before the web.
https://web.archive.org/web/20190909191211/https://kb.iu.edu...
Comment by boobsbr 10 hours ago
Comment by kristianc 20 hours ago
Comment by rbanffy 18 hours ago
Comment by mosburger 11 hours ago
Comment by doublerabbit 15 hours ago
It always felt a long winded way to find stuff or was that the "sponsored content" we get now?
Comment by romanhn 11 hours ago
Comment by dredmorbius 7 hours ago
DMOZ was another such classification, originally launched by Mozilla and run for a time by AOL, though it closed in 2017, discussed on HN at the time <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13762362> and <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13759032>.
These were both useful and limited. Useful because early Web content-based search sucked. Altavista was the best of the bunch to my recollection, and only launched in late 1995. Google came along in (late?) 1997 and blew everyone away, I was using it by 1999. There were "sponsored content" directories, but those tended not to gain much traction as they were so obviously inferior in quality. The main directories generally avoided this taint.
The Web was far smaller, far less commercial, much less dynamic (editable / user-contributable sites were extremely rare, blogs barely existed), and pretty eclectic. Organising by category pretty much worked, as content evolved slowly, the total space was relatively small, and highlighting the Really Good Stuff was both useful and tractable. Today that's fairly intractable, though directory-like organisation might be seen in, say Wikipedia or some similar projects.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMOZ>
There are still several online directories, some general, many specialised:
Comment by kristopolous 19 hours ago
Comment by AashmanShukla 18 hours ago
Comment by rahulshah2002 20 hours ago