Talk:List of websites founded before 1995
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I founded the Gnosis Archive in 1993 (haven't maintained it or really been involved with it since 1995), as Wikipedia itself acknowledges in the Gnosticism in modern times article. "It was the first web site to offer historic and source materials on Gnosticism, and continues to do so." Surely that qualifies for inclusion? The site has remained in operation continuously since then, although the domain was only registered in April of 1995.
tvleavitt (talk) 23:04, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
I co-founded Web Communications in May of 1994 with Chris Schefler (RIP). Our web site went up shortly thereafter, and we launched our beta in September of 1994. While we officially launched our service in January of 1995, we were serving pages in 1994, including several dozen customer web sites during the beta period, and we started hosting the "WebCom Power Index" shortly after the company was founded (many references exist to the "Power Index" still exist, although the "Power Index" is no longer available and the company was sold in 1999 and the web hosting service itself was shut down a couple of years ago). Web Communications was the world's first self-service web hosting company. That should also qualify it for inclusion, I would think. At one point, we hosted over half of the sites on the Internet using Netscape's SSL enabled web server. I still have the install CD's for Netscape Server version 1.0 somewhere.
tvleavitt (talk) 23:18, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
Here's a list of sites to be folded in (or not, your call):
- www.senate.gov and www.house.gov came online in 1994
- Femmes Femmes Femmes Je Vous Aime !
- The Spot hmm, 1995
- David Siegel David Siegel
- Nathan Shedroff
- Should web-like sites that were part of Prodigy, AOL, etc. from 1986-91 also be included? As a sublist? As a separate list? Coll7 00:56, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
Here's a reprint of an artcle from 1994 with some interesting info: [1] —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Rodii (talk • contribs) .
- I'm thinking that stopping at the end of 1994 (ergo founded before 1995) is a good scope for this list; although there's plenty of good sites which showed up in 1995, the web grew dramatically in '95 and I don't think we could be fair by picking and choosing sites from then, but pre-1994 is a nice small set. KWH 07:53, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
- "The WELL" was started as a community dial-up BBS in 1985 in Sausalito, California by Stewart Brand and Larry Brilliant. It was bought by Salon.com in 1999 and is still run as a community chatroom. [[2]]
- The WELL launched on the web in January 1995--just missing our cutoff! [3] · rodii · 13:16, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
- CompuServe has been around as a dial-up portal since 1969. It was purchased by AOL in 1997 [[4]]
- Prodigy was started in 1984 as a dial-up BBS and internet portal. America Online was begun in 1989 as an outgrowth of Quantum Link, a BBS designed for the Commodore 64 and 128 computers. [[5]]
- Granted there were quite a few of them, but is it worth it to include a list of the universities that first put themselves up on the Web? There's a good number of them, but I think they should get some credit here. Domhail 20:35, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
- Do you have a list? How many are we talking about? If it's hundreds, it might be best handled as a separate page. If it's dozens, perhaps as a single bullet point for each year. Zompist 14:40, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
- www.scoutingresources.org.uk has existed continously since 1994 —Preceding unsigned comment added by DazzaDowling (talk • contribs) 21:07, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
- www.cis.ohio-state.edu came online very very early. I think it might have been online before the alleged earliest north-american site, though I'm not sure and haven't found documentation. It may have been included in built-in menus of early web browsers, if those are available. In 1992, Steve Romig began writing the earliest precursors to CGI programs. The first was a zippy-the-pinhead program, which would randomly select a zippy quote, and turn the capitalized words into hypertext links back to itself for more quotes (until you found one with no capitalized words). He also wrote a gateway which could grab an rfc from our ftp server, convert it to hypertext and serve it. There was also a man server, although it was initially a static conversion tool; I'm not sure when it was turned into a gateway. And a WAIS interface. Around February of 1993, the hypertext Usenet FAQs project came on line at this web site and grew steadily for a number of years. We also put a pair of cameras on the web in late 93 or early 94. I can document it to May of 1994 based on an annular eclipse that was documented with a long video cable and a battery pack. Spinwebbe documented it (although I believe he incorrectly attributes it to 1995). The website does not exist today only because of departmental reorganization, but www.cse.ohio-state.edu is it's direct descendant. It was an important early web site and it's a shame to leave it out. Thomasafine (talk) 20:29, 29 December 2008 (UTC)
- So far as we can tell, there were only about 3,000 Web sites globally in August, 1994, when the very first coral-reef related Web site, coral.aoml.noaa.gov (www.coral.noaa.gov) was displayed via a Macintosh server from NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, in Miami, Florida. That page has operated continuously since that time. -- Jim Hendee and Louis Florit, originators of the site. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hendee (talk • contribs) 17:34, 12 October 2010 (UTC)
style
I'd like the list item text to primarily link to a WP article on the site or the organization... then in the summary text we can include links to the Current site (if still exists) and/or archive of the site (if exists). KWH 07:51, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed as a goal--that's why I left the redlinks above here. It's a work in progress, though. Some of those external links can be turned into wikilinks eventally. · rodii · 13:30, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
What I'd like to see (also) is links to the original pre-1995 site, courtesy of archive.org. Mdmcginn (talk) 18:31, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
jodi.org
Seeing art.net added made me wonder about jodi.org--certainly the first "site as art" site I remember. I can't figure out when they came online,though--anyone? (See Jodi.) · rodii · 19:23, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- I don't have time to read it fully, but this article indicates that jodi.org was in 1994 or 1995, along with others... if this is something which interests you maybe you can find out for sure and update the Jodi article with this info... KWH 21:14, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- I surely will do that--it seemed reasonable to ask, though. 1994 sounds right to me. The trouble with jodi is that the site itself was so inscrutable. Maybe there are old domain registration records somewhere. · rodii · 22:38, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
IMDB
- Why is IMDB listed as being founded on 2 seperate years?
- No good reason; this is a list of websites, not databases, so I removed the earlier reference. Zompist 22:44, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
I think this might be better off deleted
This seems abritrary using 1995 as a cut off point, POV in that it mentions only some websites founded before 1995 (there were many more websites than this before 1995), and Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information.--h i s s p a c e r e s e a r c h 00:25, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
- It's not indiscriminate; the article begins with an explanation of what is being collected. As for a cutoff date, that's what makes it a list of early websites. Zompist (talk) 02:17, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
To me, this article is valuable and interesting. Mdmcginn (talk) 18:30, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
Gopher?
How does Gopher qualify as a Web site? I don't see how it belongs here any more than do newsgroups and FTP servers. 69.143.40.175 (talk) 14:24, 2 February 2009 (UTC)
- It's not a web site. It's not even primarily a search engine. It was (primarily) a menu-driven document server that let people read documents stored elsewhere on the internet, like the web. But it lacked hypertext capabilities and essentially lost out to the web. If any search engine belongs on this list, it would probably be WAIS servers, which were capable of searching multiple information sources including the web. I wasn't directly involved and my memory is sketchy, but I believe interfaces to WAIS were on the web around 1992. Battling McGook (talk) 17:50, 23 November 2012 (UTC)
bianca's smut shack 1994 first Vbulletin style forum
This is significant because it was the first site to utilize the 'Vbullitan" type of format still used in internet forums today Cosand (talk) 17:02, 23 November 2012 (UTC)
TUCOWS
I have a problem with the entry for TuCows on the list of websites before 1995 - I can find no real evidence that this is the case. The first appearance of tucows in NCSA whatsnew pages was July 1995. Likewise the first mentions of Tucows on usenet archives occur only after this date. At that time, it was not a separate domain (which I'm fine with for inclusion, just trying to pin down a progression of events).
I see on tucows own website they claim a history going back to 1993. They say Scott Swedorski had a personal website in 1993. This could only mean a personal web page at his place of work in that era, which is possible. Even that would be fine for inclusion if it existed. However I also searched for Swedorski on usenet archives, and only found a couple of messages before this time period which make no mention of the web or his personal website or tucows. I similarly find no signs that his library was on the web before february 1995, in either usenet or NCSA whatsnew. I did find an announcement message from swedorski in 1995 that had been forwarded to a usenet group: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!search/before$3A1995$2F7$2F31$20swedorski/comp.internet.net-happenings/9TdOSsnbcZo/2dhI1b60qZcJ
Normally I just delete these things straight away, but since tucows claims on their website to date back to 1993, I'm willing to wait a bit. But all the evidence I can find seems to indicate that swedorski wasn't really doing tucows in any substantive form until mid-95. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Battling McGook (talk • contribs) 17:37, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
World-Wide Web Worm listed twice
The World-Wide Web Worm is listed twice. Jidanni (talk) 23:23, 28 August 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks. Looks like it was announced in March 1994 on NCSA what's new pages. And the 1993 entry says it began development in 1993. So even if it was crawling in 93, it was not a significant resource until it was announced. I'll merge the two. And I'll add WebCrawler while I'm at it, announced in June '94.Battling McGook (talk) 17:52, 29 August 2014 (UTC)
Amnesty International - www.amnesty.org
Hi there. I set up Amnesty International's first web/ftp/gopher site in September 1994, in collaboration with the organization's International Secretariat.
The site was hosted from 1994 - 1996 with Internex Online, an early Canadian ISP. Internex Online mapped every site's disk space to their web, ftp, and gopher servers so that a site was accessible via any of those protocols. Here's a Usenet post from 1994 referencing the site [Ray Mitchell's pst, bottom of his post]: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topicsearchin/soc.rights.human/Amnesty$20AND$20Interntional$20AND$20before$3A1995$2F01$2F01/soc.rights.human/1ygd30lmzY0
In 1996, the site was moved to my own ISP (Ontario Intenet Link) and renamed www.amnesty.org; here's an Internet Archive snapshot from October 1996: https://web.archive.org/web/19961028025135/http://www.amnesty.org/
A WHOIS entry will show the amnesty.org domain was first created in 1992. It was created by a far-sighted amnesty supporter who donated the domain name to Amnesty International sometime between 1994 - 1996.
The site has become perhaps the largest repository of human rights documents in the world, and I'm hoping to have it included in this list.
Thanks!
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