Thursday, March 25, 2021
A Recap on My Part about The Silly Shit Fools Tried to Tell Me YEARS AGO...!
MTR - Derrick Jaxn is the greatest liar, manipulator, and narcissist of the 21st century...
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
BGS IBMOR - Evening with Green Gorilla (TheGwithaPhD)
Sunday, March 21, 2021
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Nicole's View: Barack Obama & Bruce Springsteen Talk Reparations On New Spotify Podcast
Monday, March 15, 2021
Nicole's View Live: With Special Guest, Jason Reid
Professor Blacktruth - Democrats Passing Laws For Everyone Except Black Voters
Professor Blacktruth - Bill Maher & Megyn Kelly Team Up To Attack Black People
Professor Blacktruth - Dr Seuss Proves "Cancel Culture" Is a MYTH!
Professor Blacktruth - The War To Invent A False Definition of "Reparations" Intensifies
PT Archives - Ripping Out Lies By THE ROOT!
PT Archives - Roland, Reid & Rye The Wheels Just Fell Off The Short Bus!
Tariq Nasheed: Abused For Clout
Tariq Nasheed: From Bedwenching To Backpedaling
TBA 3-6-2021 Race Role Reversal
TBA 3-13-2021: The Congressional Black Decoy
Alina Selyukh - The Big Internet Brands Of The '90s, Where Are They Now?
Decided to POST THIS so You can see how things have changed and the Fact that THINGS SHOW,
once again, that A SPECIFIC GROUP OF LARGE WHITE-CORPORATIONS. Have been able to BUY UP SMALLER, LARGE COMPANIES & CORPS. It also highlights HOW OLD the Internet ACTUALLY IS. But simply WAS NOT OPEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC.
The Big Internet Brands Of The '90s — Where Are They Now?
Verizon is buying Yahoo for $4.8 billion, acquiring its "core Internet assets" — search, email, finance, news, sports, Tumblr, Flickr — in essence writing the final chapter of one of the longest-running Internet companies.
Last year, Verizon bought another Internet pioneer, AOL (aka America Online) for $4.4 billion — complete with its ad targeting technology and content sites Huffington Post and TechCrunch.
This got us thinking: What happened to all those other big brands that dominated the early Internet experience? Here's a nerdy remembrance of a few of them. (A TL;DR preview: Yahoo and AOL bought a bunch of them, though many survived far longer than you might think.)
CompuServe
CompuServe launched for consumers as a dial-up online information service in 1979, and its popularity skyrocketed in the 1980s and 1990s. It was the original online portal, with news, chats, file sharing — a first such experience for several generations of users.
H&R Block (yep, that tax-prep company) bought CompuServe in 1980 and in 1997 sold it to WorldCom, which in turn passed on the subscriber base to the growing rival AOL. After itself going through a merger and then a spin-off with Time Warner, AOL officially shut down CompuServe in 2009.
Prodigy
A younger competitor to CompuServe, Prodigy was a "home computer information service" launched nationally in 1990 by a partnership of Sears and IBM, distinguishing itself with the addition of graphics and advertising support. The service lost money and users in the early '90s and went through a reboot in 1993, according to Wired.
Prodigy Classic officially shut down in 1999, citing the "Y2K problem," and the Atlantic has a great long read on what went wrong. The company re-imagined itself as an Internet provider and got fully acquired by SBC communications, now known as AT&T.
AltaVista
Launched in 1995 by Digital Equipment Corporation as a demo project, AltaVista — aka a web "super spider" — was essentially an indexing predecessor of Google.
It changed hands a few times: Compaq Computer bought it in 1998 (for $3.3 million), one-time Internet giant CMGI bought it in 1999 (for $2.3 billion), ad company Overture Services bought it in 2003 (for $140 million) and it was acquired by Yahoo later the same year. Yahoo officially shut down AltaVista in 2013.
GeoCities
This was like the original Facebook — or, um, MySpace? You could find a community and build your own neon-colored, spinning-animation, multi-fonted, totally cool personal web page! After its mid-'90s launch, Yahoo bought GeoCities for more than $3.5 billion during the dot-com boom in 1999, ran it as Yahoo! Geocities and eventually shut it down in 2009.
But if you're nostalgic, you could still Geocities-ize websites, thanks to the Internet.
Ask Jeeves
Remember that web butler Jeeves who answered your web queries in a distant echo of today's Siri?
Launched in 1996, Jeeves didn't live up to Google's search engine ascent: Bought in 2005 by IAC (whose businesses include OkCupid, Tinder, The Daily Beast, CollegeHumor and Vimeo), it went through several relaunches, abandoning the search engine and emerging as Ask.com.
Angelfire
The website host/builder is still around! Launched in 1996, it was bought a year later by another dot-com startup WhoWhere, which in turn was bought in 1998 by Lycos, described by CNN at the time as "the world's fourth most popular Web site, behind America Online, Yahoo and Microsoft." Lycos, after trading hands many times, currently belongs to Indian digital media company Ybrant Digital.
Netscape
A brainchild of now-legendary Marc Andreessen and Jim Clark of Silicon Graphics, the Netscape browser beat Microsoft to the market in 1994. After intense "browser wars," detailed by Engadget, Netscape's release of the source code spurred the creation of Mozilla.
AOL bought Netscape for the dot-com-bubble price of $4.2 billion in 1998, though it ended up costing $10 billion. As Firefox gained prominence, AOL made several attempts to revive Netscape's popularity, but eventually stopped supporting it in 2008.
ICQ
Launched in 1996 by Israeli company Mirabilis, the "I seek you" chat service was an alternative to AIM and Yahoo Messenger (both of which are still around, and the latter is apparently beloved by oil traders).
AOL bought Mirabilis in 1998 for $287 million and sold ICQ in 2010 to Russian investment firm Digital Sky Technologies for $188 million.
Bonus '90s Brands That Are Still Around
eBay (owns Stubhub; previously also owned Skype, Craigslist and PayPal);
Match.com (now owned by IAC, along with Tinder and OkCupid);
Amazon.com (owns Audible, Zappos);
MapQuest (launched as a web service in the 1990s, it was bought by America Online, which is now owned by Verizon);
WebMD (formed as a result of a 1999 merger, backed by Microsoft and featuring the co-founder of Netscape).
ClarificationJuly 26, 2016
A previous version of this post called CompuServe the original portal to the Web. In fact, while CompuServe launched for consumers as an online information service in 1979, it was not at that time a portal to the World Wide Web.
Thursday, March 11, 2021
A Hectic Workweek... And the Hands...? ...Of Lord Bloodia....
Monday, March 8, 2021
It's Been a LONG DAY...!
I'm tired.
New concept-artwork is DONE!
I need sleep.
I'm going to bed.
Post will be up tomorrow.
Goodnight from Philadelphia...!
Saturday, March 6, 2021
Thursday, March 4, 2021
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Channel ZERO - Terminator X To The Edge Of Panic
Tuesday, March 2, 2021
African Diaspora News Channel - Beauty Supply Store Owner Reveal The Tactics Used By Korean Suppliers To Make Black Stores Fail
Just like with the Crack-Epidemic.
I'm NOTICING A PATTERN HERE.
It's ALMOST AS IF WE AREN'T ACTUALLY CITIZENS...!?
-_-
Heh-heh-heh....
Here is the Video: