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Jumper K. Balls
Jumper K. Balls UberDork
12/22/15 9:39 p.m.
logdog wrote: I miss geocities.

Don't worry duder. I got your back.

logdog
logdog GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
12/22/15 9:51 p.m.

In reply to Jumper K. Balls:

Thats awesome!

GameboyRMH
GameboyRMH GRM+ Memberand MegaDork
12/23/15 7:06 a.m.
DirtyBird222 wrote: Random fact: Only 6% of the content on the internet is considered mainstream or what normal folk visit on a routine basis. The other 94% is considered the dark web and rarely will you find those sites on a google/yahoo/bing search unless explicitly searched for.

To be clear, this is marketing speak. They call the "dark web" anything that isn't highly popular at the moment. In technical terms, the "dark web" consists of web pages only accessible through a darknet like Tor/I2P/Freenet, and popularity doesn't factor into it.

I don't think outdated information is a problem at all, often it can be helpful. If you don't want to see old information you can filter it out in your search settings.

bluej
bluej SuperDork
12/23/15 8:15 a.m.

If the choice is all of it or none of it, I'm good with getting it all and figuring out what of it I want to keep.

ProDarwin
ProDarwin UberDork
12/23/15 8:30 a.m.
Keith Tanner wrote: The difficulty of writing a book and getting it published does set the bar a bit higher. Lots of crap makes it into print, but it's a lower percentage IMO.

There was a good NPR story on "catfish" amazon books recently. Basically:

1) person hires someone in $$$cheap country to generate a book. It is complete crap.
2) Puts book up for sale on amazon
3) pays for fake reviews
4) pays for people to down-rate any negative reviews
5) ends up with a very good selling kindle book

I think many sites are working on solutions to the reviews, but even with the fake ones, I'll take them. I HATE standing at a store looking at a product and having no idea if it is a piece of E36 M3 or not.

I do think in general internet content has come down a notch. There is always really good stuff out there, but it seems to be getting diluted more and more with crap. I used to have just view the news from a search provider and look at whatever seemed interesting. Now if I click on one of those articles, it usually:

A) wants me to log in
B) is full of spam
C) has 25 links to articles like "5 actresses you won't believe play call of duty while taking a dump!"
D) is only a comment or two from a person then a link to the original news article elsewhere

So now I kinda stick to sites where I generally enjoy their articles (ars technical is probably my #1) and only read from there.

slowride
slowride HalfDork
12/23/15 8:36 a.m.

I'd say yes and no. It's harder to find relevant info now I think. Especially annoying are those garbage auto-generated sites that come up sometimes. People have become used to getting everything the want right away, that makes it hard to deal with them when you are not able to provide exactly what they want right this instant.

On the other hand, most sites are pretty now. And finding something obscure to buy is easy.

AngryCorvair
AngryCorvair GRM+ Memberand UltimaDork
12/23/15 9:19 a.m.
ProDarwin wrote: 25 links to articles like "5 actresses you won't believe play call of duty while taking a dump!"

Links are missing...

Enyar
Enyar Dork
12/23/15 9:33 a.m.
ProDarwin wrote:
Keith Tanner wrote: The difficulty of writing a book and getting it published does set the bar a bit higher. Lots of crap makes it into print, but it's a lower percentage IMO.
There was a good NPR story on "catfish" amazon books recently. Basically: 1) person hires someone in $$$cheap country to generate a book. It is complete crap. 2) Puts book up for sale on amazon 3) pays for fake reviews 4) pays for people to down-rate any negative reviews 5) ends up with a very good selling kindle book I think many sites are working on solutions to the reviews, but even with the fake ones, I'll take them. I HATE standing at a store looking at a product and having no idea if it is a piece of E36 M3 or not. I do think in general internet content has come down a notch. There is always really good stuff out there, but it seems to be getting diluted more and more with crap. I used to have just view the news from a search provider and look at whatever seemed interesting. Now if I click on one of those articles, it usually: A) wants me to log in B) is full of spam C) has 25 links to articles like "5 actresses you won't believe play call of duty while taking a dump!" D) is only a comment or two from a person then a link to the original news article elsewhere So now I kinda stick to sites where I generally enjoy their articles (ars technical is probably my #1) and only read from there.

The flipside with reviews is I feel like there are some products that get a solid review train going and all of a sudden this POS flashlight is a best seller even though there are vastly superior products out there for a better price.....just no one buys it because there are no reviews.

Don't get me started with clickbait.

Enyar
Enyar Dork
12/23/15 9:35 a.m.

The positive side of this is I predict the print media/local stores that weathered the storm will again start gaining in popularity as trusted sources/good deals.

drainoil
drainoil Reader
12/23/15 8:28 p.m.

"Good" and honest legit deals are still there, they just require a bit more effort to find. Aside from the commerce portion of it, the internet has made the world pretty small and what use to be only local news pre-internet, can easily become world news now depending on the content.

Ransom
Ransom GRM+ Memberand PowerDork
12/24/15 12:33 a.m.
KyAllroad wrote: One of my problems with the Internet these days is that outdated information doesn't go away. Example: I search for info on a CSP build and keep getting hits for ten year old info/data/builds that don't help me now.

Even just dates on articles/posts/whatever would be nice. A lot of stuff would be easier to filter if you knew it was 2, 3, 8 years old...

Nathan JansenvanDoorn
Nathan JansenvanDoorn Dork
12/24/15 5:12 a.m.

You can filter your google search by the date it was posted.... The Google search tools are pretty powerful.

moparman76_69
moparman76_69 UltraDork
12/24/15 6:21 a.m.

But the internet is just for memes right?

92dxman
92dxman SuperDork
12/24/15 11:23 a.m.

Ebay is still alright. You just need to weed through a lot of crap to find the decent deals/items/sellers.

David S. Wallens
David S. Wallens Editorial Director
12/24/15 12:50 p.m.
Enyar wrote: The positive side of this is I predict the print media/local stores that weathered the storm will again start gaining in popularity as trusted sources/good deals.

The word there is gatekeeping. Who do you trust for content, whether it be news or a product review?

Brian
Brian MegaDork
12/24/15 1:17 p.m.
moparman76_69 wrote: But the internet is just for memes right?

I thought the internet was for pRon. I'll refrain from further show tunes references.

Wall-e
Wall-e GRM+ Memberand MegaDork
12/24/15 1:20 p.m.

I won't

Brian wrote:

moparman76_69 wrote: But the internet is just for memes right?

I thought the internet was for pRon. I'll refrain from further show tunes references.

EvanR
EvanR Dork
12/24/15 2:59 p.m.
ProDarwin wrote: C) has 25 links to articles like "5 actresses you won't believe play call of duty while taking a dump!"

I thought this article was the entire purpose of the Internet.

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