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7 votes
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Machine, Learning, 1951
4 votes -
Building a $100,000 speaker - Meridian facility tour
5 votes -
Why I (Still) Love Tech: In Defense of a Difficult Industry
8 votes -
(1999) A refrigerator that “thinks” – intelligent refrigerator will simplify homes
5 votes -
The making of Amazon Prime - An oral history of the subscription service that changed online shopping forever
6 votes -
The telegraph was America's first singularity
7 votes -
Meet your iPhone’s grandparent
6 votes -
The rapid rise and slow fall of the Microsoft web browser
6 votes -
Why there's so little left of the early internet
2 votes -
The History of Video | Veritasium
4 votes -
The long, complicated, and extremely frustrating history of Medium, 2012–present
14 votes -
Intransigence: A social history of the internet
5 votes -
The lost worlds of telnet
17 votes -
The Morris worm at thirty
4 votes -
The history of Android
9 votes -
Altavista: The Rise & Fall of the Biggest Pre-Google Search Engine
12 votes -
Flickr will soon start deleting photos — and massive chunks of internet history
27 votes -
The internet was built on the free labor of open source developers. Is that sustainable?
14 votes -
“The Linux of social media” - How LiveJournal pioneered (then lost) blogging
8 votes -
The Rise and Demise of RSS
35 votes -
Apple computers used to be built in the US. It was a mess
11 votes -
The cover of MAD magazine #258 from October 1985 announces a special computer section featuring the MAD Computer Program
7 votes -
Remember backing up to diskettes? I’m sorry. I do, too.
11 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
19 votes -
Four days trapped at sea with crypto’s nouveau riche
16 votes -
Navy training video - Mechanical computers [1953]
6 votes -
An error message in Windows 10 is a mistake from 1974
@foone🏳️⚧️: It is 2018 and this error message is a mistake from 1974.This limitation, which is still found in the very latest Windows 10, dates back to BEFORE STAR WARS. This bug is as old as Watergate. pic.twitter.com/pPbkZiE57t
32 votes -
The rise and demise of RSS
11 votes -
The very first social network
10 votes -
How the humble pocket calculator morphed into the smartphone
10 votes -
The history of shareware, as told by the people who were there
9 votes -
When Televisions Were Radioactive - Anxieties about the effects of screens on human health are hardly new, but the way the public addresses the problems has changed
6 votes -
It's been five years already, let's gawp at Microsoft and Nokia's bloodbath
8 votes -
100 years before drones, in search of better aerial photography, Dr Julius Neubronner patented a miniature pigeon camera activated by a timing mechanism and created a remarkable body of images.
11 votes -
St. Louis was the first to use mug shots to capture the bad guys
8 votes -
The graphing calculator story
14 votes -
We can't fix the internet (because we conflate social media with the entire internet)
13 votes -
Even before electricity, robots freaked people out
5 votes -
A spectre is haunting Unicode
18 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
A look at a brilliant 1945 paper on the future of computing
1 vote -
The rise of digital dictatorships - Prof. Yuval Noah Harari
5 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
A program from a thirty-five year old magazine for “BASIC Month” and a chat with its author
4 votes -
Remembering an Atari Computer Lab in Hampton, Virginia
3 votes -
On the rise and fall of Delicious, the online bookmarking service
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and...
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and that I think could exist.
One of the first online bookmarking services I used was Delicious, and for a few years it was irreplaceable for me. However it languished after it was bought by Yahoo and then resold, and since then I’ve observed its slow and steady decline from afar.
The purpose of this post is twofold:
- I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
- Were you once a bookmarker and gave up due to the seeming futility of it?
- Have you never been interested in bookmarking and/or don’t see the point of it?
- Are you an active bookmarker, and if so what tools or workflows do you use, and what kinds of content do you bookmark?
- I thought I would share some of the research I did into Delicious’ various design iterations over the years via the Internet Archive. It’s a cool birds-eye survey of how the service’s ethos, goals and design changed over time. Beyond the value it provides as a case study, I think there are greater lessons and insights that can be gained from observing the rise and fall of what was once such a beloved online service.
- del.icio.us | 16 September 2005
- del.icio.us | 20 December 2005
- del.icio.us | 11 October 2006
- Delicious.com | 11 May 2011
- Delicious.com | 27 November 2011
- Delicious.com | 12 May 2012
- Delicious.com | 30 August 2012
- Delicious.com | 14 October 2013
- The period between 2013 and 2016 seems to be one endless loading screen from the archive’s perspective
- Delicious.com | 15 March 2016
- At some point in 2016, they went back to their original domain name – del.icio.us | 14 May 2016
As a sidenote, I also found this explanation of Delicious' approach to tagging to be very interesting: del.icio.us/help/tags | 21 February 2006
I hadn't realized that Delicious was actually the first to introduce the concept of user-controlled tags for bookmarks:
When Delicious was first launched, it was the first use of the term "tag" in the modern sense, and it was the first explicit opportunity where website users were given the ability to add their own tags to their bookmarks so that they could more easily search for them at a later time. This major breakthrough was not much noticed as most thought the application at the time "cool" but obvious. – Source
Edit: I hope it's alright to edit a post this many hours after having submitted it. There were a few important updates that I really wanted to include here.
18 votes - I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
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The mother of all demos - 1968 live demo introduction of the computer mouse, video conferencing, teleconferencing, hypertext, word processing, and more
10 votes