Thanks everyone so far!
While I was around in the 90s, my most vivid memories of the internet started in ~1996.
Before this, it was mainly my father who did go online (CompuServe, Datex-P, BTX/T-Online)..
That being said, I remember IE3 and Mosaic to be around still.
IE3 was also an optional component of WinCIM 1.3/1.4 or so.
This was before they released that bloated Compuserve software for Win95..
Before that, I mainly hang out in mailbox systems, because they were not as dangerous in terms of cost.
They did cost as much (little) as a normal phone call, after all.
The downside was, though, that connection speeds were rather slow via analogue modem.
Sure, there was Integrated Services Digital Network, or simply ISDN, but that seemed as futuristic as a leased line.
Btw, do you guys remember the times before local calls were free of charge?
Back then people were already happy that local calls did cost a bit less than calls to other cities/states, not to mention countries.
I do also vaguely remember that calls during specific day times (or rather, night times) were less costly.
Goper.. I must admit that I had little contact to gopherspace directly in the 90s.
I mainly read about it in computer / communications magazines my father had subscribtions for.
The internet as such seemed to be just like another database or online service, at the time.
Because of my father and older movies, I grew up with the concept of AX.25 networks around the globe that keep the world connected.
Alas, these older networks were superseded, or rather, assimilated by the tcp/ip/udp networks that spread like fire, or rather, expanded like slime molds through their hosts.
Edit: Ok, please forget the last line. I sometimes write weird stuff during nightimes.. 😅
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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