Dial Up. Yeah I know the sound and I know the time it took to load anything with. But it’s something I won’t ever miss having. I would much rather be on a 1MB connection if I had to choose between that or dial up ever again. I also hated how easy it was to be kicked off, if anyone called the phone, you were off it in seconds.

  • son_named_bort@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Pop up ads. They were a plague in the early internet day.

    Myspace. There were so many poorly designed Myspace pages that were hard to read and would make it take longer to load the website.

    • fubo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      “Pop-up blocking” started out as a feature of specialty web browsers like iCab and Opera. If I recall correctly, Firefox was the first “mainstream” browser to build it in as a feature; and Chrome supported it from the beginning.

    • TechyDad@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      My “favorite” (in hindsight only) popup experience: I was new to my job and was taking a short break from work to look something up on Barnes and Noble’s website. Except, I typed BarnesNNoble dot com instead of BarnesAndNoble. I was presented with the image of a woman sans clothing and it certainly wasn’t a book she was enjoying!

      Obviously, I’m at work (and right down the hall from my boss). I do NOT want to be viewing this stuff now so I close the window. Except up pops another window with another woman definitely not reading. Close. Another one. Close. Another one. Close. Another one.

      I actually started sweating because I was sure that my boss would walk in any moment and ask just WHAT I was looking at during work hours.

      Finally, I managed to hit close before the pop-up script was able to run. We take pop-up blockers for granted today, but those times between the invention of the pop-up and the pop-up blocker were treacherous times to be online!