OT: When did you first start using the interwebs?

Submitted by DISCUSS Man on

i bought my first computer in 2001 and it ran Windows ME. What a piece of junk!

Was kind of curious to see when others got their start on the computer and internets.

DISCUSS

LBSS

April 16th, 2015 at 12:02 PM ^

This. Also, he never actually claimed to have invented it, just that he was responsible for the economic support it got.

To quote Vinton Cerf, who actually played a major role in in inventing the internet:

"Al Gore was the first political leader to recognize the importance of the Internet and to promote and support its development. 

"No one person or even small group of persons exclusively "invented" the Internet. It is the result of many years of ongoing collaboration among people in government and the university community. But as the two people who designed the basic architecture and the core protocols that make the Internet work, we would like to acknowledge VP Gore's contributions as a Congressman, Senator and as Vice President. No other elected official, to our knowledge, has made a greater contribution over a longer period of time."

steve sharik

April 16th, 2015 at 12:35 AM ^

As a Math/Teacher Ed. student at EMU.

Used pine email starting in early '90s while at UM.  Cool story bro: when I entered the Ross MBA program in '12, my original uniqname was still on file and I had to use it. At Ross I was the only one of my colleagues whose uniqname wasn't some form of his/her actual name.  

HermosaBlue

April 16th, 2015 at 9:09 AM ^

Pine email at UM in 1990, using a 2400-baud modem to dial into the University's network.

My email address is my initials @umich.edu, and has been for 25 years, including a detour through @alumni.umich.edu and through Ross when i came back for my MBA.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

oriental andrew

April 16th, 2015 at 10:03 AM ^

Freshman year was 94 for me, where I learned of Pine email and IRC. I can't remember when I started checking out ESPN.com, but I think it was around 95 or so. Used to play Doom II online with all the other geeks at the UGLI computer lab instead of studying for orgo. I quit after Warcraft II, but many of my friends continued on with Command and Conquer, Starcraft, Diablo, etc. at NUBS, and then the Media Union after gaming was banned at NUBS due to a fight breaking out over Starcraft, I think. 

sdogg1m

April 15th, 2015 at 10:26 PM ^

My first computer was a Compaq Presario.

It had a cool Pentium 75Mhz processor, 8 Megabytes of ram and a 750 Megabyte hard drive. I had a sweet 14.4Kbps modem!

The Internet Service Provider was The Internet Ramp!

Those were the days!

pasadenablue

April 15th, 2015 at 10:27 PM ^

I started in 1994. There was literally a scrollable list of about 40 websites. I would always surf the UC Berkeley dinosaur museum. In my defense, I WAS 7. But cmon, I got to use a computer and learn about dinosaurs at the SAME TIME? Hell yeah.

blackstarwolverine

April 15th, 2015 at 10:31 PM ^

When I was 8 (1998); remember the dial-up at my dad's university. To think my phone is more powerful than that Window's 98 computer using Netscape; still remember when AskJeeves, AIM, and Yahoo all seemed advanced.

BlueCE

April 16th, 2015 at 12:47 AM ^

The day eWorld started offering it (i believe they were the first from AOL, Compuserve, Prodigy), I think 1993.  Before then these services did not offer "internet", they only offered an online community within their service, you couldn't go outside of their community - chat, marktplace, business, etc.  I skipped school that day waiting for the "Internet" icon to show up.... when it did I had no idea what to do.  It was awesome

aleng

April 16th, 2015 at 10:30 AM ^

This is awesome, I remember having the same experience! My cousin and I couldn't figure out how to get a site to come up for a few days until we realized you had to put .com behind it... and yes, playboy was high on the list of sites that needed to be visited.

Achilles

April 15th, 2015 at 10:34 PM ^

Mid-90s. I actually miss AOL and its chat rooms. I had a lot of fun with those. Lots of shit talking but also good conversations about sports, music, movies, and obviously sex.

alum96

April 16th, 2015 at 9:35 AM ^

Back in the old days in chat rooms for AOL when you surfed for "hot chicks" (which were probably just guys) to talk to, you asked A/S/L?  So you saw it everywhere.   That was the context so it became I guess a meme.

Wolverine Devotee

April 15th, 2015 at 10:39 PM ^

2000. My parents got it as a gift from a neighbor. It was a Compaq that ran Windows 98. 

At 5 years old I was on there playing computer games and doing all kinds of stuff. I was better at using the computer than my parents at that age. It was a time when having a computer was a big deal. I remember having family members coming over to use it.

Other than the using the ones at the public library, not many had access to it it seemed.

I remember the ORIGINAL MGoBlue.com when it probably consisted of 1/16 of the coding it does now.

The internet modem was a pancake-looking box with blinking red lights across it. To use the internet, you had to plug it into the computer and run a phone cord all the way across the hallway to my parent's room where the nearest phone jack was.

I miss the Windows 98. Good memories. I remember it taking at least 3 minutes to navigate to a single website, though.

These hands were made to type and be on a computer. Funny how something like that lead to me pursuing a career in it 14 years later.

Frito Bandito

April 15th, 2015 at 10:40 PM ^

Had something or another with ms dos, floppy disks and a giant tower when I was almost too young to remember. As far as interwebz. I had AOL on my (family's) HP with Windows 95. AOL was dope, for those too young to know and I'm not talking about just instant messenger. If you don't know what instant messenger is.... Quit drinking Faygo and go to bed.

Wolverine Devotee

April 15th, 2015 at 10:49 PM ^

AIM was still all the rage when I was nearing and at junior high age. 

This was when parents weren't insane and giving their 12 year old (and younger...) children a cell phone.

I went back to my old elementary school to do community service work for college admissions and whatnot and these kids have cell phones in 5th/6th grade! Teachers don't even use chalk/white boards anymore there. It's all this touchscreen stuff.

I could write a book where I rant on human dependency on technology and title it "What Happens When Technology Fails....?"

Mr. Yost

April 15th, 2015 at 11:32 PM ^

You're too young to remember the original AIM.

When you logged on before dinner, ate, then sat down at the computer after dinner and the dial-up had worked and got on.

Turned the speakers up loud to hear the door open and the first person IM you.

...or the free AOL discs that came in the mail.

 FTW

Wolverine Devotee

April 16th, 2015 at 12:16 AM ^

I remember getting those discs until at least 2002 in the mail. They were always in those small tin containers and there was never one that looked the same in color scheme.

My AIM name was Michigan24OSU12 in reference to the 1969 win. No joke. WD my whole life, really.