Linux-proxy-me-do

From: sinkywinky14 Jul 2013 09:18
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 16 of 52
I've moved house and my (fibre :Y ) internet hasn't been installed, so I pressed a button on my mobile and turned it into a wifi hotspot and connected my computer to it.

/FUTURISTIC/
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)14 Jul 2013 09:20
To: sinkywinky 17 of 52
:|
From: sinkywinky14 Jul 2013 09:25
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 18 of 52
quote:
Estimated download speed: 56 Mbps 
Estimated upload speed: 20 Mbps 

 :-O~~~

From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)14 Jul 2013 09:26
To: sinkywinky 19 of 52
That is just ridiculous :Y
From: dyl30 Jul 2013 21:48
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 20 of 52
I'm sure you downloaded the Windows XP Pro Corp CD on dialup and put it on a CD and posted it to me.
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)30 Jul 2013 22:23
To: dyl 21 of 52
:D

I also downloaded like 8cds worth of Debian on dialup. That took weeks.
From: ANT_THOMAS30 Jul 2013 22:30
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 22 of 52
I remember downloading XP betas on dialup. By the time one had finished another build had leaked!
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)30 Jul 2013 22:44
To: ANT_THOMAS 23 of 52
Haha :D

I remember waaaaay back when we all used to stay up late when there was going to be a HL/CS update. And then we'd all rush to the FTP servers to be the first to play it.

That was fun :Y
From: Ken (SHIELDSIT) 2 Aug 2013 08:03
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 24 of 52
Isn't it funny how time erases all those terrible memories, only leaving fuzzy warm ones.  I remember how exciting just being on the internet was.  It felt so fresh and exciting!  I still wouldn't go back and use dialup again though.
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 2 Aug 2013 09:00
To: Ken (SHIELDSIT) 25 of 52
I would. Take me back, Ken!

Take me back before the last September, where we can all be fresh and young and free.

Take us back to the days of forever, before the gifs and the spam and the fucking FB.

Bring us back to the better times, let us rebuild this mess, and help make me happy. :)

From: Ken (SHIELDSIT) 2 Aug 2013 09:12
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 26 of 52
That was amazing! Nice one!

But, no I won't take you back.
From: Dan (HERMAND) 2 Aug 2013 11:21
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 27 of 52
I do miss when the Internet was primarily just geeks. I remember vividly being the only person I knew with Internet access and nobody really quite understanding it. 
From: ANT_THOMAS 2 Aug 2013 11:27
To: Dan (HERMAND) 28 of 52
I also remember a great time when the unwashed masses couldn't use Facebook. It was just the unwashed students back then.
From: Dan (HERMAND) 2 Aug 2013 11:40
To: ANT_THOMAS 29 of 52
To be honest, I was a relatively late adopter to Facebook, in that sense. I think I joined 2007 ish.
From: Ken (SHIELDSIT) 2 Aug 2013 14:03
To: Dan (HERMAND) 30 of 52
I really, really miss having to buy a browser!  :-S
From: Dan (HERMAND) 2 Aug 2013 14:05
To: Ken (SHIELDSIT) 31 of 52
Uhm, when was this...?!
From: Matt 2 Aug 2013 18:36
To: Dan (HERMAND) 32 of 52
Opera used to charge for their browser. They stubbornly continued to do so for a long long time, despite there being arguably better free browsers available.
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 2 Aug 2013 18:41
To: Dan (HERMAND) 33 of 52
Also back before IE existed pretty much all browsers (what few there were) were pay for. We really have MS to thank for free browsers :Y

(When IE came out for free, Netscape shat themselves because if it gained dominance (and it would, being free) it would allow MS to pervert the web protocols/standards and corner the server market (which is where NS made their real money). So they released the source to the Netscape suite and launched the Mozilla project. And... the rest is history :Y )


From: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 2 Aug 2013 18:43
To: Matt 34 of 52
You see that Opera switched rendering engines to Blink (i.e. Google's webkit)? 

Such a strange move. 
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 2 Aug 2013 18:46
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 35 of 52
Although, hmmm, the main thing that stopped me using Opera was that it fucked up rendering too often. Might give it a pop :Y