Guestbooks: the cozy 90s web fad which shaped the future!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
  • Support Veronica Explains: support.linux.mom
    Sign my guestbook: gb.donttrythis.net
    ---
    Guestbooks. You know them. Or do you?
    In today's 90s-tastic episode of Veronica Explains, I go through the ins and outs of the guestbook, one of the most influential progenitors of modern social media on the web.
    We'll even install one from the 90s - yes, from Matt's Script Archive, on a brand new Debian 11 install. It'll be "fun-tertainment!" Come break some Perl with me!
    0:00 I say "greetings" and talk about guestbooks
    1:31 How I used guestbooks as a 90s teen
    5:50 How were guestbooks implemented?
    8:16 Can we set up a guestbook today?
    8:57 Testing Perl CGI scripts... in 2023
    10:45 Installing a guestbook script
    14:17 Filtering for spammers- with math!
    15:15 Pining for the 1990s web, looking forward to the future
    #linux #webdesign #retro
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 204

  • @VeronicaExplains
    @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +36

    Hi all! Pinning a comment!
    The guestbook might experience high load just after posting this video. I'm seeing comments to that end- if you get a server error, make sure you answered the math quiz right, and try again.
    It's a nearly 30 year old CGI script, it's *not* optimized for multiple concurrent connections. That's what the old web was like (but we didn't have RUclips videos sending hundreds of visitors to websites, either).
    Anyway, good luck, and happy guestbooking!

    • @aaron_11111
      @aaron_11111 Год назад +2

      I really enjoy this type of video. A few months ago I mentioned dial-up-internet to a co worker and they had no idea what I was on about. When I explained the dial up process they were surprised (almost in disbelieve).

    • @danielktdoranie
      @danielktdoranie Год назад

      Oh I wanna sign YOUR guestbook.
      No, I really do, that’s not a euphemism

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +6

      Addendum! I will not be responding to comments about GIF vs GIF. Potato potato, tomato tomato. Language is flexible and you should be too. :)

    • @danielktdoranie
      @danielktdoranie Год назад

      @@VeronicaExplains In am VERY flexible. Like Gumby over here.

    • @wintermute740
      @wintermute740 Год назад

      We *did* have /. sending hundreds of visitors to websites, though. And later, fark. ;)

  • @TheBlueThird
    @TheBlueThird Год назад +81

    It would be awesome if you could do a series on the old web. I really do miss those days.

    • @AndrewErwin73
      @AndrewErwin73 Год назад +2

      I accessed the internet through my local library's BBS (mid to late 80s)... way before there was a world wide web. I think that is why I have always gotten along with the Linux terminal so well. It is how I learned to "surf" in the first place.

    • @dingokidneys
      @dingokidneys Год назад +6

      I too would love to hear more of Veronica's experiences with the early web. Unfortunately, I was too old to really get into it at the time as I had a wife, two kids and a crushing mortgage to take care of with a job that only allowed me (officially) to work with mundane office computer applications. Networking was "the dark arts" to which I was inexorably drawn.

    • @experimental0000
      @experimental0000 Год назад +2

      Same.

    • @Yep6803
      @Yep6803 8 месяцев назад +1

      On old OS! It would be interesting also on modem… I mean, it would be a dream. I was born in ‘96 and I saw the last years of this.

    • @MrFIRESEAL117
      @MrFIRESEAL117 7 месяцев назад +1

      That would be awesome. I'm very nostalgic about the 90s internet . It was like a new frontier. We were all just figuring it out together.

  • @EricaCalman
    @EricaCalman Год назад +66

    "Just enough PERL to be dangerous" sounds like a description of an entire generation of low key hackers and should be the name of your album if you release one haha.

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +8

      This is a great idea for an album name.

    • @dingokidneys
      @dingokidneys Год назад

      I was a corporate accountant since the late 1980's but I used Perl all the time for data manipulation. I built whole systems to handle reporting, data validation, and data conversion using Perl and loved it. Perl4 was a great language for this stuff as it was compact and I could get away with putting it on corporate systems as a single binary.

    • @Danielspss
      @Danielspss Год назад

      😂😂 sounds cool asf

  • @LeftoverBeefcake
    @LeftoverBeefcake Год назад +16

    This whole internet website thing is still just a fad and will fizzle out any day now.

  • @thatjpwing
    @thatjpwing Год назад +35

    I love this! I miss the spirit of the 90s web too. We had so much fun back in the day. These days it's a different kind of adventure.

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +9

      Absolutely. It was a blast figuring out how all of this was going to work in our lives.

    • @diabeticnomad
      @diabeticnomad Год назад +2

      @djsupercub now a totally different kind of adventure.
      @VeronicaExplains thank you for reminding me how old I am

  • @DV-ml4fm
    @DV-ml4fm Год назад +9

    I remembered the internet in the nineties. I remembered asking if anyone is going to use the phone before connecting to the web. Lol

    • @20000lbs_of_Cheese
      @20000lbs_of_Cheese Год назад +2

      and getting knocked offline when someone picked up the phone... or doing so maliciously >:(

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +5

      Right in the middle of a game of Descent!

    • @DV-ml4fm
      @DV-ml4fm Год назад +1

      The good ol' days. Lol 🙂

    • @dingokidneys
      @dingokidneys Год назад +1

      I was old enough to get on-line when the kids and the missus had gone to bed. Too bad about work the next day. :(

    • @DV-ml4fm
      @DV-ml4fm Год назад +1

      ​@Veronica Explains BBS also allows messaging. And among other things. 🙂

  • @keylowmike85
    @keylowmike85 Год назад +16

    As someone that was a teenager in the later 90s and early 00s, I decree that guestbooks, Geocities, and 56K modems are the cornerstones of early web surfing. Thanks for that nostalgia trip!

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ Год назад +1

      You've obviously never stayed up to 3am trying to download a 300kb file from a BBS and waiting for LotRD to reset over a 2400/14.4, hoping to get an hour of sleep before having to go to school to write an exam.

    • @dingokidneys
      @dingokidneys Год назад

      We used to dream of 56K modems! My first modem was a Netcomm 14400 baud (14K) modem and I was lucky to get that. The naughty pictures came down really slowly in those days!

    • @vicmac3513
      @vicmac3513 Год назад +1

      In my friendhood, geocites defined the word "bloatware" with all the pop-ups and blinqy sites.

    • @byron_00
      @byron_00 Год назад

      @@dingokidneys I used to dream of 14K baud modems. My first modem was a 300 baud on a VIC 20. The lab modems in my school at the time were a mix of 110 and 300 baud. The days of a non-commercialized online experience were glorious.

  • @jcparker500
    @jcparker500 Год назад +3

    As an old geezer I lived through all of this. First as a SysOp running a BBS until the Internet came along and ruined that, then as a webmaster after that. Had it all - the web rings, guest books, PhP forums. Good times! I do miss those days when the Internet was so much simpler and naive. Of course, I don't miss things like having to use RealPlayer to watch videos! Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

  • @suddenlyvlogs
    @suddenlyvlogs Год назад +10

    An old web series would be awesome!
    Also the Comment Bin had me HOWLING 🤣🤣🤣

  • @balcobulls
    @balcobulls Год назад +5

    I must say, the wave of nostalgia that washed over me while watching this episode was great. As a devoted fan of your channel, I find that immersing myself in your content has a effect of slowing down the pace of life for a few minutes. Your unique ability to transport us back in time while still incorporating modern knowledge is truly impressive and greatly appreciated.

  • @bassism
    @bassism Год назад +4

    I like these looks back at the ancient web. I built my first website in 96, at 8 years old…. A couple of links to aviation related pages, a photo gallery, ugly pixel art backgrounds, a spinning GIF prop I made myself, and, of course, a guest book. There is no way I could have foreseen where we would end up.
    Things just hit different back then. That page had less content than a typical Reddit post, but I poured my heart and soul into it. I regularly checked back on it right up until the school took it offline sometime around University. It was always a nice feeling to see some guestbook comment from somebody half way round the world.
    Still remember the URL and hit it up in the way back machine from time to time, lol

  • @HisVirusness
    @HisVirusness 7 месяцев назад

    Signed. That feeling of being taken back to the actual guestbook, and not seeing your comment because you know you have to refresh the page. Unironically nostalgic.

  • @geoffmerritt
    @geoffmerritt Год назад +1

    Tables, Dreamweaver, cgi-bins... the memories are flooding back

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад +1

      I might have an old version of Dreamweaver somewhere in my cd wallet. I know I have a FrontPage- I'm hoping to do a video on it sometime, perhaps later this year.

  • @hopegrant1167
    @hopegrant1167 8 месяцев назад

    Took me back 28 years in a split second when you showed Matt's Script Archive! I had completely forgotten about a major resource for me back in the day when learning Perl :-)

  • @WistrelChianti
    @WistrelChianti Год назад +2

    My god... I'd completely forgotten about these things ha ha. Love the video and modern implementation explainer. Thanks for taking me back XD

  • @happysprollie
    @happysprollie Год назад +1

    I think a museum somewhere should be creating a collection of all those GIFs saying 'under construction'. When I first started mucking about with creating web pages, I really needed one saying 'I have no idea what I'm doing'.

  • @davidwesst
    @davidwesst Год назад +3

    Y'all are great. I haven't thought of guestbooks in forever. Would love to see more videos on parts of the 90s web scene, especially the tech bits.

  • @schnuder
    @schnuder Год назад +3

    I had almost forgotten about guestbooks. As someone who learned to surf the web on a NeXT Cube in a university lab while waiting on scientific experiments with hands-off portions to complete, aka sitting and waiting; and learned html when tables were first introduced. This is a level of behind the scene complexity that is fascinating that I didn’t understand at the time, as I just copied and pasted code like you.
    I’d love to see more dives back into things like webrings worked and lead up to our modern internet.

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ Год назад

      Um, most of the "web rings" were for "mature audiences". That's pretty much it. I do recall some general-purpose stuff for various "fandoms", but most were for kids' stuff.

  • @CraftComputing
    @CraftComputing Год назад

    I love this channel. Excellent aesthetics, and a chill tone. - Jeff, Oregon
    Also, excellent ploy to drive comment engagement on videos 🙂

  • @VektrumSimulacrum
    @VektrumSimulacrum Год назад +1

    I remember back in the day when html was the big thing and typing on a computer was pushed extra hard. Typing is more of a given these days. Gawd that makes me feel old.

  • @vicmac3513
    @vicmac3513 Год назад

    "Welcome to the thrilling episode" = morning coffee allover my keyboard

  • @wintermute740
    @wintermute740 Год назад +2

    I re-purposed my BBS phone line to the one I used for Internet access, then set up a Linux server on my network and had it setup to maintain my dial-up connection 24/7. So, I ran my own web server, over dialup, no less, even in the mid-90s. And yes, I ran my own guestbook, which I wrote myself in php. I also had a counter, but after July 15, 2001, instead of tracking visitors, it tracked how many times CodeRed attempted to infect my server. Which was a lot. lol Makes me wonder... How many infected IIS servers are still out there trying to propagate that worm? Maybe I should parse my Apache logs the way I did back in the day for that counter and see if it's hit my current server since setting it up. lol

  • @etgripper
    @etgripper Год назад

    I still remeber packing pillows behind the computer late at night so my parents wouldn’t wake up, either the modem sounds couldn’t be muted or I didn’t know how to mute them at the time. But they’d figure it out anyway when the Gemstone bill came 😢

  • @Mauuuurice
    @Mauuuurice Год назад

    Ooooh... I remember writing all those perl scripts back then. And I remember how thrilled I was, when I found a provider offering 2MB of free hosting webspace...

  • @Weissenschenkel
    @Weissenschenkel Год назад

    I like the idea and I went there to sign your guestbook too. Cheers!
    (I started browsing the internet in mid-1995 during my graduation)

  • @mudi2000a
    @mudi2000a Год назад

    What a flashback! I forgot they even existed...

  • @AndrewErwin73
    @AndrewErwin73 Год назад +5

    Perl is still a thing! Latest release was less than a year ago! :)
    Perl was cool back then, it was a lot like Python now, as in, everything is already there. Whatever you want to do, there is probably a library for it.

    • @dingokidneys
      @dingokidneys Год назад +1

      I loved Perl, particulary Perl4 which I could get on a Windows machine with a single binary.

    • @AndrewErwin73
      @AndrewErwin73 Год назад

      @@dingokidneys no doubt. Perl was cool... everything was there, and you could even compile into executable bins! Haven't used it in a REALLY long time. But Python reminds me a lot of it.

  • @AlexAutrey
    @AlexAutrey Год назад

    The only thing I dont miss about this is writing the perl to santize the txt document where all the comments were saved. The erra of the CGI script was so excited when PHP came out and you could interact with a database easier.

  • @TheHivan
    @TheHivan Год назад

    thank you for taking me back to my teenage years for a moment

  • @blevenzon
    @blevenzon Год назад

    Love this!! Thank you as always Veronica

  • @alanjrobertson
    @alanjrobertson Год назад

    Great video, Veronica - I remember GeoCities well - nice marquee tag, visitor counter and yes, as you say, guestbook 😁🤓

  • @jscollett
    @jscollett Год назад

    I miss the early web. It was so exciting and new. I also enjoyed the simplicity.

  • @noranature
    @noranature Год назад

    yeah, guest books. I totally forgot about that. what a feeling to be reminded of it again. Thanks Veronica

  • @queens.dee.223
    @queens.dee.223 Год назад +1

    I totally forgot about guestbooks. Thank you for the quick bit of unexpected nostalgia!
    edit: And FF6 sound effects! Amazing!

  • @ricksanchez207
    @ricksanchez207 4 месяца назад

    love the Blizzard references!

  • @antarchy9
    @antarchy9 Год назад

    Wrote a few of those CGI scripts back the day. Glad I discovered this channel, thank you!

  • @bjornroesbeke
    @bjornroesbeke Год назад

    Guestbooks. I've made some, i've left notes in some, i've shown my inner scriptkiddie in them... I miss the old(er) web sometimes.
    And i've learned some Perl today!

  • @Jammet
    @Jammet Год назад +1

    There already were a lot of toxic messages back then even in the guestbooks. Even in mine, which was on a Fan page for the Lion King. Can you imagine that. The worst I remember was a life threat, that actually was traceable to a certain person and I had to call the police to get it straightened out. And no it wasn't the norm -- most of it was wonderful. But yeah, online harassment existed since online existed, I guess.

  • @gotoastal
    @gotoastal Год назад +2

    I would like to see a video on XMPP; where Jabber came from, how Pidgin and other libpurple-supported, multi-platform instant messengers worked (AIM, MSN, YIM, ICQ), what MUCs are, how modern XMPP has evolved with XEPs for contemporary chat, and a brief explanation of how and why you would self-host and administer a decentralized ejabberd or Prosody server

  • @tkay42
    @tkay42 Год назад

    Wooooooow. I realy forgot this and would never ever tought about it again, if it was'nt for you. Thanks for that! 😃 - Crazy memorys about the Guestbook 😂

  • @oasntet
    @oasntet Год назад

    Back when we were complaining about Perpetual September, we had no idea how good we had it.

  • @discomallard69
    @discomallard69 Год назад +1

    Very nice video! It would be nice to see more about retro website design in general.

  • @BillyDickson
    @BillyDickson Год назад

    A little nod to an older and more interesting online time, I remember it fondly, thank you!
    I would love to hear your thoughts on IRC. 🎶👍

  • @timothy8428
    @timothy8428 Год назад

    Oh,wow! Webrings.
    Haven't heard of them since the last time I saw a 'page under construction' animated gif.

  • @fourteen00
    @fourteen00 Год назад +1

    I actually thought about this a few months ago, all of the local funeral homes in my area have virtual guestbooks on their obituary pages still.

  • @eveypea
    @eveypea Год назад

    I would love to see the older quirks of the web and please please please do a video on web-rings.

  • @rebeccaschade3987
    @rebeccaschade3987 Год назад

    I love your twisted pair T-shirt. It's amazing ^^

  • @1olddoggie
    @1olddoggie Год назад

    Another great video!

  • @certs743
    @certs743 Год назад

    This was a fun blast from the past.

  • @dunny0
    @dunny0 Год назад

    I'd totally forgotten about webrings until now. My janky anglefire site was part of a star trek one. Good times.

  • @sweetasdude
    @sweetasdude Год назад

    Well this was a walk down memory lane, subbed.

  • @tarbyonlineful
    @tarbyonlineful Год назад

    Would love you to do more 90’s videos! ❤

  • @borstenpinsel
    @borstenpinsel Год назад +1

    Well, that was an unexpected blast from the past... I've used and even programmed my fair share of guest books some 20 years ago. The Internet seemed more innocent but I wouldn't exchange it for the one we have today with the likes of youtube, for any price.

  • @Mitsunee_
    @Mitsunee_ Год назад

    so fun seeing Astro in the screenshot where you show that interest in Static Site Generators is there currently. I tried Astro and it feels like I went back to PHP but with way nicer syntax and all the tools and knowledge aquired as a frontend dev in the past half a decade. I've even finally learned a tool in rehype (part of unified) that would allow me to write my own guestbook that allows some html, but no scripts, embeds or images :)

  • @lawrencemanning
    @lawrencemanning Год назад

    My first website was on the uni “server”, which was just another HP UX workstation. This was 1995. Of course I had a guest book, stolen from somewhere. I miss those days, I admit it. I remember replying to the first spam I received, not really understanding that it was an automated email. Happy, innocent days.

  • @feudiable
    @feudiable Год назад

    16:42 " ... 'cause guestbooks are awesome, and so are YOU!" :D

    • @kubakonik9377
      @kubakonik9377 29 дней назад

      reminds me a bit of Mr. New Vegas

  • @randomactsofvideos313
    @randomactsofvideos313 Год назад

    Hi Veronica, love your channel! You are correct. Back then ya needed to know something about putting up a website or associated interactive programming, these days nah ... I love the the old web.

  • @airjuri
    @airjuri Год назад +1

    Haha, kläsik. My first PHP project was somekind of guestbook back in late 90's :D

  • @El-Gato-42
    @El-Gato-42 Год назад

    This takes me back. Back in the day I wrote cgi scripts with bash and C.

  • @meowcula
    @meowcula Год назад

    please Vernica - I would love if you covered more of the early web. I remember the horrors!

  • @ScottGrammer
    @ScottGrammer Год назад

    I had entirely forgotten about Internet guestbooks. Thanks for reminding me of them.

  • @erforado
    @erforado Год назад

    tnx veronica,i didnt understand what u say ,but it was fun:)

  • @dastafford
    @dastafford Год назад

    I miss livejournal and having the space of writing out your feelings without regretting it 5 minutes later.

  • @michaelmccoy6674
    @michaelmccoy6674 Год назад

    I've been having a lot of fun exploring 90s style sites on neocities. People have set up webrings, sites with guestbooks and lot of other cool stuff there

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 3 дня назад

    As a programming language, I hated Perl. But at the same time, I really really enjoyed Larry Wall's book on the subject.... ugh! I made a shopping cart application in Perl with no SQL.

  • @Brian.S
    @Brian.S Год назад

    Let's not forget the dozens of website "awards" in those days, each with its own arbitrary criteria.

  • @WXLM-MorganNicole619
    @WXLM-MorganNicole619 Год назад

    Yes, I’d like to see more about ancient web tech ❤❤

  • @darryllyle5250
    @darryllyle5250 Год назад

    This absolutely took me back. Also, remember when there were not only Internet Providers but e-mail providers as well? There was a Juno service that had dial-up e-mail.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Год назад

      My (late) grandfather was still on Juno until he lest this decade.

  • @elizabeththompson4424
    @elizabeththompson4424 Год назад +1

    I remember BBS's & a primitive internet in the late 1980' & early 1990's
    never heard of this

  • @ecavero1
    @ecavero1 Год назад

    I thought the only way to do guestbooks was to store the post in a database (or other file) and use the serverside to read them. It didn't occur to me I could edit the page itself! Then again, I was self taught. The only thing I knew was ASP and VBScript. I didn't know how to use the cgi-bin. I found out ages later, but I couldn't get other binaries to work. I also didn't know about Apache or any other web server; only my small and powerful Personal Web Server. I could even publish anything I wanted from the IP my ISP gave me! I didn't know how to put a domain name behind it, and I didn't have money to buy one, anyway, so I gave the IP address!
    The good old days!

  • @ianrandy
    @ianrandy Год назад

    I love the nostalgia, more would be excellent

  • @joaojotta64
    @joaojotta64 Год назад +1

    Didn't get your shirt at first (thought it was about web safe colors or something) but then it "connected". 😅 Great one!

  • @calibby
    @calibby Год назад

    This reminded me of AIM Subprofiles … remember that era? I used to host my own once I figured out how they worked

  • @mikebrophy
    @mikebrophy Год назад

    Speaking of “pine” you should do an episode on the PINE email/Usenet client!

  • @Verifraudreports
    @Verifraudreports Год назад +1

    Tripod and geo cities. Haven't heard that in a while. Guess i qualify as super geek og.

  • @fluidsc_
    @fluidsc_ Год назад

    I really miss guestbooks, and even more than that BBSes, and oneliner doors when you login to a BBS ;)

  • @k1ll3rkoala
    @k1ll3rkoala Год назад

    I've been looking into "indie web" stuff in nostalgia for this old web.

  • @paulodelgado6281
    @paulodelgado6281 Год назад +1

    GEOCITIES GANG RISE UP!!!! I can't even remember what neighborhood I was on :(

  • @user-pc9th4xr6i
    @user-pc9th4xr6i Год назад

    I'd love to hear more about webrings!

  • @jaygreentree4394
    @jaygreentree4394 Год назад

    I kinda miss those days. tripod surprisingly still exist and dont seem to have changed much at all. I still have a login system a friend and I build in perl hosted there.

  • @ivymuncher
    @ivymuncher Год назад +1

    the awkward pauses kill me (in a good way [don't worry])

  • @ringo8410
    @ringo8410 Год назад

    Yeah please do cover parts of the 'old' internet; this was a fun walk on memory lane. I was a '90s teen myself and I miss the days before the more corporate internet that tracks our every move.

  • @fotografm
    @fotografm 2 месяца назад

    Web ? Great video. Please do one on 300 baud dialup BBSs that used to be all the rage 🙂

  • @DDBAA24
    @DDBAA24 Год назад +1

    made me think of AOL profiles and when normies discovered CSS.. I'm feeling old, the days of serving MP3's in a chatroom before Napster was a thing,,,, Winamp, booting people, good times.

  • @dajelinux
    @dajelinux 7 месяцев назад

    I wrote tons of HTML tables in my teens!

  • @ribbontoast
    @ribbontoast Год назад

    oh my god guestbooks, i loved them
    my crowning achievement on old internet was hacking an installation of graymatter into a guestbook

  • @AlanElChato
    @AlanElChato Год назад

    Hey Veronica!
    Man, Guestbooks, huh?
    I love them, used to use them a lot back in the day and I wanted to write something on your GB buuuut I keep getting a Server Error ):

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Год назад

      It's getting hit a lot right now. It's a very old script so it doesn't scale well to RUclips! :P

    • @AlanElChato
      @AlanElChato Год назад

      @@VeronicaExplains Damn, well I guess nobody will see my GuessBook entry ):
      Anyways, thanks for answering Veronica, keep up the good work
      Cheers!

  • @mgp09
    @mgp09 Год назад +1

    Kids these days never get to do stuff like this mostly because everything is handed to them . Would love to nerd out to videos like these. - 90's kid 😄

  • @GooogleGoglee
    @GooogleGoglee 11 месяцев назад

    Veronica we want a video of you doing this with a Commodore 64 😊

  • @pabloenriquegorga4222
    @pabloenriquegorga4222 Год назад

    I there, still using tables, no problem with them if you know how to use it. 😀

  • @shelches
    @shelches Год назад

    Choosy Linux moms choose Gif!
    Sorry Veronica, I had to! Another awesome video -- thanks! 🙂

  • @martin_emrich
    @martin_emrich Год назад +1

    Being overcautious with a script-happy audience is surely a good idea...
    But as I still hold Perl dear, some comments:
    The first perl script is not dangerous at all.
    In the end, the CGI module executes the script, and sends the output down the line. So there is no "back channel", and thats also why you have to print the headers, too. Same if the script was Python, NodeJS or even bash.
    And, sarcastic comment, surely safer than importing everything from pip or npm that some random dude across the globe just uploaded. (And same applies for CPAN, of course).
    The "dangers" are all classic code injection attacks, just als possible today.

  • @philippklostermann7768
    @philippklostermann7768 Год назад

    A real perl monk would have laughed at my code, as it looked like C. I still sometimes use perl on the command line.

  • @kristalsoft
    @kristalsoft Год назад

    Loves from Istanbul ! ❤

  • @20000lbs_of_Cheese
    @20000lbs_of_Cheese Год назад +1

    I strive to be reasonably effective

  • @recourse1979
    @recourse1979 Год назад

    Oh man you mentioned BBS' I miss them so much. What terminal program did you use? I was a telix fan.

  • @jasperburchfield2028
    @jasperburchfield2028 Год назад

    I would like to hear your thoughts about MySpace.

  • @michaeljmeyer3
    @michaeljmeyer3 Год назад

    Guestbooks... but what about ye olde web ring? :) Ultimate 90s SEO replacement (kinda)
    On the wayback machine, my old Angelfire site is memorialized by the classic: 'The page you are attempting to access has been removed because it violated Angelfire's Terms of Service.' - I created and hosted shell games, MUDs, mainly, and used Angelfire as a front end. I guess that pissed them off. :/
    Sadly, I never did implement a guestbook on anything.

  • @KarmaMan82
    @KarmaMan82 Год назад

    Oh I see a Mac OS 9 - Screenshot!
    Is there a webserver, server based language and a database for this system like Apache, PHP and MySQL?
    My PowerBook G3 Pismo is waiting for this.

  • @AlanCanon2222
    @AlanCanon2222 Год назад

    Loved this installment.