Neineon77

I've been told I'm "pocketable"

I make my own patches, sometimes draw and I like old/cute video games. I work on computers and retro handhelds/consoles


hootOS
@hootOS

I know what naysayers are already thinking: "if it's shutting down, how does it prove that your definition of The Pure Internet can happen?"

first, the definition. The Pure Internet, to me, is an internet that functions the way I remember it as a young kid. It's primarily sharing stories and information, whether that be through shitposts and memes or long-form blog entries. Cohost is a fantastic example of The Pure Internet; it's not perfect because it's built by and for humanity, but it's unapologetically built for humans to exist in. It's not built for human consumption, which is your Twitters, your Facebooks, et cetera. You don't "consume content" on The Pure Internet," you are in community with The Pure Internet.

So how does Cohost shutting down prove that The Pure Internet can exist? Well, it fucking existed. That's how. It proves that these things can pop up every now and again. It proves that you can be lucky enough to get pulled into The Pure Internet just because you know somebody who knows somebody, or because you heard about it from someone you're following, or you heard from a friend. It proves that these types of projects aren't unreachable or unattainable.

Furthermore, Cohost's short existence is itself proof of genuine, vintage Internet. Many websites developed back in the day were short-lived and only seen by a few eyes. In retrospect we see all the long-term projects like social media platforms, YouTube, Twitch, et cetera, but we don't remember all the smaller pieces of the puzzle that went missing. we don't notice all the tiny sites that existed in an incredibly small way, here today and gone tomorrow.

These things can happen. People are desperate for a Pure Internet, and there are people willing to step into the Modern Web and make it happen with exhaustive effort. ASSC are just one group of many other passionate people who want Pure Internet to exist. Cohost is a proof-of-concept for a revolution won by paper cuts. If we, as people who've experienced the Internet at its best in 2024, can show others that it's possible to experience the vibes of The Pure Internet, in its true-to-form short-lived nature.

Go forth and proselytize the goodness of The Pure Internet. It can exist in 2024. It can exist in the future. The Human-centric Internet can blossom even in this late-stage capitalist hellscape ruled by the ultra-rich.


ceryl
@ceryl

Is that on top of the links to various social media sites, so many posters are putting up links to personal sites. Often at the very top of the list.


Neineon77
@Neineon77

I want to keep this purely html and css so it'll probably look like this just a bit more organized, I have posts about my game gear mods and the patches I've made on there already

I'm in fact doing research and testing somethings out about my most popular post, upgrading ipods and setting them up with rockbox :) (in text and video form)
https://cohost.org/Neineon77/post/3703280-i-pods-are-still-cool

if you have a personal website and like my stuff send me an ask or message me on mastodon https://tech.lgbt/@Neineon77 your website and I'll link it in mine :) we can make web rings like the early internet


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in reply to @hootOS's post:

How can I contribute to making a pure internet? I'm so tired of bouncing from one social media to the next, constantly losing the ability to follow artists that I like because of enshittification and AI and stuff.

i have no fucking idea. i'm not much of a techie. all i know is that whatever this is was cool as fuck, and the fact that it existed shows that people with enough tenacity and funding can make it happen. im not smart enough to say what people should do to bring the old internet back.

It's a small thing, but you can make your own website with Neocities. It's not the same as the social experience you get here or on other sites, but personal web pages cobbled together with amateur coding know-how and passion are what the old web was built on.

YES. The fact that’s its ending doesn’t diminish the fact that it EXISTED (and, for now, still exists) — it emphasizes it. If it was a failure, my timeline wouldn’t be full of people being sad.

in reply to @ceryl's post:

i get this is meant to be uplifting and all but part of it just makes me feel jaded that i didn't "really" participate here

i have like, what, 7 posts that aren't straight rechosts and i feel like i didn't do enough here because of that.

it's sort of a feeling that i'm happy that a pure internet is possible, but frustrated that i never seem to be able to contribute

This is contributing. Making even the tiniest post is contributing. It is all part of the greater whole.

Trust me, I rarely made chosts I think are worth a damn, but in my little way, in all our little ways, we contributed.

one of the amazing things of the old internet was just the passive knowledge that someone out there in the great void yonder, whom I would never see, may be looking at my webbed site and think "hey, this is neat :)". I would never know they really exist. I would never know if they thought what they thought. It's a stage play to an darkened, silent, audience

But back then I would hope someone like you would experience it and enjoy it. Being the audience member is no less important than playing your part on the stage.

That makes me feel a little better. I guess I was just in a really bad spot yesterday, with one thing after another happening to me that wasn't very important in the long run.

But it all happening really quickly put me into a doomspiral that my friends were disappointed in because i had been making progress avoiding that kind of thinking.