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5 votes
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Nineteenth-century critiques of technology show how longstanding many current concerns are
4 votes -
She spent a decade writing fake Russian history. Wikipedia just noticed.
8 votes -
Minitel: France’s alternate Internet that survived until 2012
13 votes -
Scifi hifi
7 votes -
The past and future of flag emoji
4 votes -
Is the long-extinct social network Orkut on the verge of a comeback?
5 votes -
Canon has a “museum” of every camera they’ve produced on an obscure part of their website
19 votes -
My 90's TV!
14 votes -
An analysis of what crypto has now become by David S. H. Rosenthal, one of the original developers of PoW
9 votes -
She was a notorious hacker in the '80s - then she disappeared: Searching for Susy Thunder
19 votes -
Bliss - The story of Windows XP’s famous default wallpaper
4 votes -
Always remember - The Therac 25 incident
17 votes -
When SimCity got serious: The story of Maxis Business Simulations and SimRefinery
7 votes -
Hark back to the late 1990s with this re-creation of the dialup Internet experience
6 votes -
Secret military telephone buttons
7 votes -
How the SOPA blackout happened
5 votes -
Minitel: The online world France built before the web
4 votes -
How the personal computer broke the human body
10 votes -
Nautilus (GNOME Files) icon view retrospective and future
5 votes -
Kartrak: The first barcode
3 votes -
Webcams
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous...
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous with “sex show”.
I think around the time I first heard that word, having a webcam usually meant you would use it to do nude shows with.
They weren’t integrated with computers back then (laptops were super expensive and not popular yet, and they weren’t a mainstream laptop accessory until way later). So if you had a webcam, you had to really seek it out and pay quite a bit of money for it. It made little sense for people to buy them just to use them for personal reasons and most jobs didn’t have a utility for them.
… except sex work. Live, paid access cam shows immediately caught on. And people would see those in ads (ads tended to be trashy with zero quality control back then, even automated. Worse than now, I swear), and associate “webcam” with “webcam show”.
There was no reason to otherwise hook up a camera to a computer if not to stream its contents to the web, anyway. The first webcam, that famous coffee pot, was just that: a web-connected camera. Web cam. Wikipedia talks about “Jenni cam” — I wasn’t on the anglosphere’s internet at the time so this escaped me, but it does seem to agree that the concept entered the mainstream not via videoconferencing, but via cam girls.
5 votes -
Trackers: The sound of 16-Bit
6 votes -
How much time, money and human cost went into Windows Vista? (2006)
9 votes -
Hand-built original Apple-1 fetches $400,000 at US auction
5 votes -
Can data die? Why one of the internet's oldest images lives on without its subject's consent.
27 votes -
Space-related applications of Forth (1998)
2 votes -
The lost history of the electric car – and what it tells us about the future of transport
6 votes -
Hampster Economics - Pondering how a meme from a quarter-century ago might have gone over in today’s much-more-mature creator economy
3 votes -
The rise and ruin of Couchsurfing.com
10 votes -
Discovery Channel's Beyond 2000: Wearable Computers (1992)
7 votes -
Documenting the last pay phones in America
12 votes -
Why lying about storage products is bad: An IBM DeskStar story
12 votes -
A decade and a half of instability: The history of Google messaging apps
22 votes -
The inside story of how the lowly PDF played the longest game in tech
15 votes -
Life before Unicode
13 votes -
1Password 8: The story so far
10 votes -
History of the Segway - Dean Kamen's literary agent revisits the story twenty years later to reflect on his contribution to the invention's hype and failure
3 votes -
Today is the World Wide Web's 30th birthday - On 6 Aug 1991, Tim Berners-Lee published the first page, and changed the world
11 votes -
The internet feeds on its own dying dreams
4 votes -
Getting inked up? Thank Thomas Edison.
3 votes -
RIP SpaceJam.com, 1996-2021
16 votes -
Cassette history/trivia: A series of fortunate events
4 votes -
Tracing paper - A brief history of the secret plan to track every printed page
6 votes -
The web's first online bookmark manager
12 votes -
History of 4chan
7 votes -
The real novelty of the ARPANET
8 votes -
What color was “Apple Beige”
11 votes -
The word "Robot" is a hundred years old this month
19 votes -
HD laserdisc: HD in 1993
3 votes