IRC. Having a ton of inside jokes and situations funny enough to post on http://bash.org/
… also reading bash org for hours on end
Relaxed section for discussion and debate that doesn't fit anywhere else. Whether it's advice, how your week is going, a link that's at the back of your mind, or something like that, it can likely go here.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
IRC. Having a ton of inside jokes and situations funny enough to post on http://bash.org/
… also reading bash org for hours on end
I really wish IRC survived. I was in a small IRC community a few years ago but, once everyone got jobs, there was little activity because it's not mobile friendly. The apps mostly suck and there's no push notifications.
Now we have a discord which is bridged to the mostly inactive IRC and, to be honest, I kind of hate it. We don't own it anymore and it's a proprietary app like the rest of them. I'd rather have a Signal group chat.
Matrix is dropped to be new IRC essentially
True and Matrix isn't bad. I wish we went there instead of Discord.
Sounds like someone needs to create a Fediverse version of Discord soon. :)
IRC was somewhat federated in its construction, but yeah it's not mobile friendly at all. It's barely Windows friendly, as it was designed to be ran on console/shell/terminal level.
This happened on the RuneScape forums when I was 11.
I was a pretty active forum user at the time, and I joined a Star Wars themed clan that role played as Jedi. It was primarily forum based with some in-game events.
I got really into it. So into it I applied to their "council" which was basically a team that led the clan. Every member of the council chose a Jedi name from the canon, but the only one I knew that wasn't taken was Anakin. I was accepted, and this became my clan name.
Not long after they decided to split the council in two, the upper council did actual leadership things and the lower council basically moderated. Power-mad 11 year old me was not happy with being placed in the lower council and threw a bit of a tantrum, ultimately leaving the clan to immediately go join a Sith based clan instead.
The irony was lost on me. It was not lost on anyone else involved.
Looking back I think it must have been quite amusing to observe.
Love the story. I’m glad you mentioned this because when I joined Beehaw it gave me a lot of nostalgia about those old forums in the early 2000s.
I miss the days when sites would run their own forums (remember phpBB?) and we had huge, organic communities for everything.
I think the mobile web killed most of that off or at least struck the final blow. The sites weren't particularly mobile friendly and they'd ask you to install an app like Tapatalk which nobody wanted.
I think some of my favorite moments on the internet revolved around all the little rumors in Club Penguin back in the day. Thinks like trying to tip the iceberg before they actually made that a thing.
IRC, for sure. Having a group of people with whom I'd chat every day while working was such an emotional boost.
There was a time about 3 or so years ago that I was a part of a meshnet over the internet, basically it's a hidden internet and we had file share servers, reddit clone, search engine, tor routing, email server, and so forth in that meshnet. It was an invite only and it was pretty amazing place. Anything you want to find (barring illegal stuff) could be found there, the network connectivity is pretty fast, because we had a few VPS servers that acts like a router so we had like 3 GBPS bandwidth for 200 people on that network.
The network kind of die off as people lose interests or moved on after a few years. I always have a fond memory of that place.
What kind of meshnet was it? I really enjoyed the time that I spent on a distributed chan that existed on tor! It was very slow and not like 4chan etc at all.
It was on a CJDNS meshnet program where it connects to note/router via UDP on public internet but when you are connected, you can connect to computers via IPv6 addresses that basically tunnel your connection through end to end encrypted meshnet protocol.
Originally, we had Hyperboria network (it also have a reddit clone that is used to be called Uppit.us) and eventually there were a splinter group that set out to create an archivist meshnet where we can share and distribute academic papers and documentations. It basically stagnant as alternatives crop up for archiving documents and people peruse that network less and less.
ah CJDNS! Heard about it, but never used it.
If we have used it everywhere on the Internet, advertisers would get booted off of it so fast. Meshnet is basically friend to friend network, so it is self regulating in a sense that if someone abuses the network, they can get depeered.
possibly tangential but i ran an FFXIV free company for a while called the Sailers of Eorzea. Built a nice little community of friends that would play twice a week and had a blast. Lots of great memories . Still friends with that crew, we're all in a guilded server but don't play nearly as much after not liking endwalker that much and yoshi-p constantly casting foot-in-mouthaga every time he talks about FFXVI.
other than that, redwall RP forum lol
@alyaza I remember when the Romanian part of Reddit was really borderline funny and witty. There were subs like r/cacareadedimineata (literally the morning dump) or r/prsh - where you would only be allowed to post/comment using "pârș" (a rather regional term for calling rodents of various species). Nowadays Reddit became more popular, but also more like Facebook. No more inside jokes, boomer opinions, more low effort memes&reposts (which, ironically, originated from Reddit as well) - to an extent that some pics got pixelated by the amount of times they were reuploaded.
Here's a list of posts that I found really really funny back in the day, without being in a particular top:
*Misleading title
My favorite memories from Reddit at least were finding the aquarium subs and the weight loss subs. I really liked being able to get into a hobby and immediately find a good community to bounce ideas off of, share what I’m doing, and ask questions.
The forum on TheEnvironmentSite.org 20 odd years back was really good. A lot of very informative and intelligent discussion and debate of subjects and some really friendly and supportive regulars there too.
I don’t think that I can pick out one particular incident or anything, but I do have very fond memories of the conversations altogether.
when i was admin on tf2.
My favorite old social media experiences include old pre-Digg-downfall reddit, and the youtube comments on certain very small gaming channels.
I've had some good recent experience with Tumblr, but some bad too. Not sure what to make of that place yet - for me, I think it requires careful curation to make sure it stays constructive and not just rage-making. But like, there is cool art, and photographs, and lots of cool marine biology content.
My actual top spot goes to archiveofourown.org, however. It's not the type of site you meant, probably, but damn if I haven't gotten a lot out of its massive library of free, ad-free, entirely volunteer made, supremely well organized (its tag system puts libraries' to shame) fanfiction. It blows every other internet community site I've participated in out of the water when it comes to creativity and user-generated content.
I also have a soft spot for Drawception, which somehow still exists despite all the odds. People play a telephone game with drawings and prompts. It's great for a laugh or three, and for art practice, though games take days to complete now there are fewer users and apparently the site owner is AWAL. It may be on its way out. But I hope not.
Probably Barry's world back in the day when I played Dark Age of Camelot and Day of Defeat. The online world was smaller then and communities felt more genuine although that may just be rose tinted glasses.
My favourite memory was when I was working for Blueyonder on the night shift in 2002. I took a call and a lady was having connection issues for an online game...turns out she was also playing DAoC on the same server and faction that I was.
I used to be extremely extremely active on an old message board for a gaming website, I was young so I constantly got into shit, but I don't think I'll ever be so invested in a forum that I could post over 200 posts per day. It was great, you'd have incredibly long threads with tons of posts from the same set of people.
Something that I remember doing was basically proving that one forum user absolutely could not have gone from cart pusher less than a year prior to owning a house with no transition in between through nothing but me remembering like everything everyone posted on there
I don’t think I’ll ever be so invested in a forum that I could post over 200 posts per day
This resonates with me. Whenever I’m posting I ask myself, “is this contributing to the discussion?” If the answer is no, I won’t post anything. The old forums that had a comment count under a username made me want to increase that so I posted on every post. I feel this lead to a lot of unnecessary and dull engagement.
Haha probably right? But it definitely also lent it a very conversational atmosphere, occasionally just small posts that didn't get much attention or getting really, really engaged with a discussion. Also it was the last time I knew basically everyone I was posting with at least a little bit.
I had a good time on a football (soccer) forum back in the day. There were a lot of active users, minigames and discussion threads, play by play analysis, football videogame tournaments, sports humour, etc. (in addition to following the team's progress through the season, of course).
Things went sour after a couple of bad seasons from the team
The first community I really connected with was on the OG MacRumors forum. I used to spend tons of time there and joined their private forum and made several friends that I ended up meeting IRL. It was such a great community back in the day (2008). I still have a handful of people I keep in contact with from there to this day.
Early 90s (like 92-94, just after the first undernet forking and while EFnet was still in one piece) IRC and getting to know like-minded people enough to talk to them offline as well and even meet them IRL.