Our own Owen Williams wrote recently with a wistful tone about the glorious old Web age of Geocities.
I suspect he – and probably you, since you clicked on this story – will really like Cameron’s World, an art website that’s scrabbled up tonnes of GIFs from those times and put them together in a glorious collage.
New York, meet the world’s tech scene
5,000 Tech leaders are coming to NYC this November to learn and do business. This is your chance to join them.
Here’s how Cameron, a designer based in Berlin, describes the project:
Cameron’s World is a web-collage of text and images excavated from the buried neighbourhoods of archived GeoCities pages (1994–2009). GeoCities was a web-hosting service that made it possible for people to build their own home pages. During the 90s, users from all over the world created personalized corners of the Internet.
By the time the U.S. service shut down in October 2009, there were over 38 million GeoCities pages. Cameron’s World brings together archived material from thousands and thousands of these sites. In an age where we interact primarily with branded and marketed web content, Cameron’s World is a tribute to the lost days of unrefined self-expression on the internet.
In a world of relatively uniform Twitter profiles and the consistent blue of Facebook, I think that’s wonderful.
➤ Cameron’s World
: The modern internet sucks: Bring back Geocities
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