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Dotcom Era Fads

prostoalex writes "Nostalgic USA Today looks at the fads of the dotcom boom era. The Dancing Baby, HamsterDance, I Kiss you dot org and the phrase 'All your base are belong to us' made the list."

27 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. I Think They Forgot One Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Jobs.

    Some days they seem like a thing of the past that might never come back.

    1. Re:I Think They Forgot One Thing by dipipanone · · Score: 4, Funny

      Jobs.

      I think that's because Steve is still about and Apple are going from strength to strength.

    2. Re:I Think They Forgot One Thing by RobotWisdom · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I tried to put these in cosmic perspective in my logarithmic timeline:

      1991: gopher

      1992: Linux, Krol's "Whole Internet Guide"

      1993: Apple Newton, Mosaic, Andrea Chen, Doom

      1994: Bill Bixby haiku

      1995: Yahoo, Greencard spam, Netscape IPO, DejaNews, eBay, Altavista

      1996: JenniCam, Palm Pilot, WebTV

      1997: dancing baby, Slashdot, 1st weblog

      1998: Drudge Report, Google, HampsterDance, iMac, DMCA, PayPal

      1999: TiVo, Everquest, Napster, Epinions, Y2K

      2000: AOL-TW, bubble pops, ArsDigita University, All Your Base

      [Lots more]

    3. Re:I Think They Forgot One Thing by Nachtfalke · · Score: 4, Funny

      And for bonus points, make it into an extra verse of "We didn't start the fire" :-)

    4. Re:I Think They Forgot One Thing by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't forget the sweating, dancing, and screaming Ballmer videos! I've been trying to, but the images are burned into my brain..

  2. What about Goatse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Seriously... probly the most seen thing on the internet during the dot come boom...

  3. It's you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    They set us up the boom...

  4. Ah but... by GregoryD · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It still surges because of people new to the internet. Everytime a new batch learns the forward button in there email program we get another round of things we seen before.

    How many more times am I going to have to forward this darn "5 cents donation for every forward for the liver transplant" email and end this flower to people you love!!! email. I think I am destined to see the Hampster Dance at least once a year for the rest of my life as every female in the world forwards it to me.

    1. Re:Ah but... by JanMark · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think I am destined to see the Hampster Dance at least once a year for the rest of my life as every female in the world forwards it to me.
      You lucky b***rd, all I get form those females is viagra ads and those enlarge your p***s in five simple steps. Which reminds me, is there anyone in the /. croud that knows if these two go together wel? (It's for a friend.)

      --
      -- (:> jms cs.vu.nl (_) --"---
  5. all you bases are belong to us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    in soviet russia, belong to all bases are you.

  6. All Your Base is post-Dot Com by Plug · · Score: 5, Interesting

    All Your Base is most definitely post dot.com.

    It was early 2001 (sheesh, that long ago?) and it was picked up by the Google Zeitgeist at the time.

    Kibology is probably pre-Dot Com as well. Maybe they meant to talk about lavish parties and venture capital being burnt?

    At least we never really had a Dotcom era to speak of in New Zealand...

  7. The thing about the dot-com boom... by heironymouscoward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We forgot about nostalgia for a little while...

    Truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience, to live through a boom/bust cycle like that. Kindof a Millenium Burnout Party, I guess.

    And that's one fad they forgot: the Millenium.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
  8. Another net fad that should die by pyrrhonist · · Score: 5, Funny

    All those graphics that say, "Powered by SomeFrigginTechnology(tm)". Sheesh, that is so 1997.

    --
    Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
  9. This is all well and good... by GrodinTierce · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...but think of all the things that didn't disappear, and should have.

    Tierce

    --


    Tierce
    Who sponsors your feelings?
  10. What about material things? by idiotnot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Aeron Chairs. 'Nuff said.

  11. History of 'All Your Base by viol8r_dk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Toaplan creates the Zero Wing video game.

    Toaplan releases a port for the Sega Genesis console with the addition of an intro scene, which is then translated into english (very poorly) and released in the United States.

    Toaplan goes out of business.

    Someone from a Zany Video Game Quotes website notices the poor translation, and highlights the game.

    Overclocked.org does a humorous voiceover of the Zero Wing intro in a fake Wayne Newton voice.

    Dozens of game-related messageboards begin to post quotes from the parody, and images altered to show the phrase.

    Most of the threads lose interest and die off quickly as the trend is pronounced dead countless times.

    The Flash movie/video is released with images from the threads and music taken from the origional game someone had added the phrase "all your base" to.

    AYB explosively expands to the general (non game messageboard-reading) public.

    The origional site for the video is shut down within hours due to excessive traffic, and moves to PlanetStarsiege.

    Lycos ponders how "All your Base" was transformed from obscurity to a top 50 search practically overnight.

    Mainstream media begin to notice the trend, and stories appear in Time Magazine, USA Today, Fox News, The Los Angeles Times, Tech TV, Wired, and many others.

    As the 'remix' used in the video goes from 58 hits a day to several thousand per day, mp3.com notices the track has been ripped directly from the video game and pulls the music off their site due to copyright violations. It is later returned unchanged.

    The trend continues to grow as it expands into nearly every corner of the web.

    Large websites like Angelfire and Hewlett Packard sneak "all your base" references into their designs.

    "All Your Base" is pronounced dead several times every day, yet it's 15 minutes of fame continue for some reason...

  12. Dot com? by rde · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suppose that the reason they called it a 'dot com' phenomenon is that it was around then that the internet reached critical mass among users; there were enough to make business viable, and - like spam - inane memes had no problem finding an audience.

    Of course, the internet is perfect for memes like 'all your base' to flourish; it takes no effort to forward an url to everyone you know; I'm sure I'm not the only one who knows at least one individual who regularly sent messages where the To: field was longer than the rest of the message combined. A swift (and usually repeated) larting usually took care of these eventually, but in a lot of cases that just meant that their list was transferred to Bcc: instead.

    Two things that I noticed around that time that didn't make the list: The warning about GoodTimes, and the now-legendary one-line email that you had to scroll through eight metres of crap and and a myriad '>>>>>' of variable length in order to read 'Check it out!!!!!!!!!' followed by an asinine url that leaves you wondering why the fuck anyone'd want to send it in the first place, let alone forward it to the universe.

    Of course, /. is no place to talk about the motes in the eyes of others; just consider the linux clusters of natalieportman.cx .

    What the hell is a 'grit' anyway?

  13. What about l3375p34| and ....? by SoVi3t · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hell, l3375p34| was a fad (well, I *wish* it was a fad...won't go the fuck away). Not sure if it would qualify as a dotcom fad. How about things like The Terrible Secret of Space? And yes, we will always get people who are new to the net (or for the most part, female), that will send us links of pictures, articles, or flash movies, that we've seen countless times. I swear, I'll have kids in 20 years, and they'll come up to me and tell me to come see the funny AYB cartoon on the computer...........

    --
    Defender of Microsoft and Communism!!!
  14. All your base are not a flash in the pan! by Limburgher · · Score: 4, Funny
    Still with us it has no time!

    Use in every post, for great justice!

    What I say!?!?

    Someone set us up the long-running gag!

    All our taste are belong to bad.

    --

    You are not the customer.

  15. Slashdotisms by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder if anyone traced back the sources of the most popular slashdotisms, like the "Dear Apple" or "I am sitting here with my freelance gig" trollings or the "In Soviet Russia" jokes? Anyone knows when the first "First post!" post was posted?

    --
    In Soviet Russia... jokes trace back you.

    1. Re:Slashdotisms by May+Kasahara · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wikipeda has a great collection of "Slashdotisms", which they categorize under "Slashdot Trolling Phenomena". They're all here (or if not all, then most): Natalie Portman, In Soviet Russia, Beowulf Clusters, etc. The Slashdot Effect has its own entry, too.

  16. Re:You kicked my dog... by B747SP · · Score: 5, Interesting
    No idea if you know this or not, but FYI "Paki" is taken to be a very offensive word by ethnic minorities over here (England)

    Nah mate, I'm Australian. There's not much we'll take offense at over here :-) You can even look us in the eye and tell us our beer stinks, and we'll just laugh at you. Tell us our politicians are dickheads, and we'll probably even buy you one of those beers! :-)

    If, for some reason, you're offended by my looking you in the eye and calling you a 'Paki', then it is your solemn duty to look me in the eye and call me a 'stinking kangaroo f*cker'. In turn, it is my duty to look offended for a couple of seconds, then burst out laughing, and proceed to buy you one of those aforementioned beers.

    Closer to home, the term "Paki" here in Australia really doesn't carry any further than a description of one particular group of folks we play 'World Cup' cricket against. (The fact that I refer to 'world cup' and another country in the same sentence should alone prove to you that I'm not an American! Americans don't invite other countries when they hold 'International' sporting competitions!!!).

    In any case, in this context, I'm just quoting the sound bite - no offense intended.

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
  17. Re:You kicked my dog... by hype7 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Does the prank call from the Paki guy accusing some chick of kicking his dog fall into this category? It certainly did at the place where I worked at the time - we roamed the halls shouting "You kicked my dog" and "I am going to sue you". To this day, my friends and I shout "YOU TRY TO CONFUSE" at each other. "Just because I'm Paki does not mean I stink".


    I don't remember that one, so I looked it up

    http://www.funnyjunk.com/pages/mydog.htm

    It's a shockwave file, and it's not bad. Not bad at all :)

    -- james
  18. Re:You kicked my dog... by sevensharpnine · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since nobody here seems to know the original source, I'd better chime in. The prank is from a Jerky Boys CD. Despite their stupid movie, those guys produced two (maybe more) hilarious CD's full of these types of calls. Even though the "why you kick my dog!" routine is funny, it isn't their best material. If you like the skit, I suggest you look into the full CD's. (I have no financial interest here; I'm simply a fan.)

    --
    "God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." -Voltaire
  19. Changes to the Workplace from the Dot Com days by COredneck · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Dot Com days made many changes to the work place which are both positive and negative.

    Many of the positives which have been fading, taken away or restricted

    Very relaxed dress code (shorts, jeans, sandals, hiking boots/sneakers)

    Telecommuting

    Flex Time ( work longer on Mon/Tue, take Fri off)

    In-house gourmet lunches

    Game room and outdoor games

    Few of the negatives which are now flourishing

    Oursourcing to India

    H1-B Visas

    Corporate executives throwing their weight around by reducing pay, taking away benefits such as flex time, telecommuting, vacations

    One company that epitomizes the positives is Google's Culture. They are one of the few Dot Com type companies still around.

    On the dress code, many companies have brought back dress codes especially the legal and finance industry. Where I work at, we are subcontrctors to Boeing on a government contract. Their top manager has a strict dress policy of having to wear a tie, slacks and dress shoes. This means no jeans along with hiking boots/sneakers/tennis shoes. This dress code even applies on trips on weekends and if you come in on a Saturday. Their work hours are strict 8 to 5. Those rules don't apply to us, YET ! There are rumblings in the Boeing group to force us to comply with those rules since they hold the purse strings. I take Thursday and Friday afternoons off just about every week but Monday and Tuesday are long days though. I also wear jeans everyday as well. We are in one of the top outdoor recreational states of Colorado.

    Part of the rumblings in Boeing to force us to comply with their rules caused a few problems for me. Back in June/July, I took 4 weeks vacation to do some traveling, go see family and one of the Managers in Boeing told me to cancel my vacation since my focus should be on working instead of taking time off that I have earned and I told him I did not answer to him and he got irate. He told me I will pay for my attitude. The same person got pissed when I happen to be around on Friday all day that they cannot get any work done because of our flex time policy. One of their computers at 4pm went down and the person who can call in left at 11 am. He was demanded that the computer get fixed this instant. He made the comment that we are lazy since we take Friday afternoon off. He fired off some complaints to their top executives.

    At Oracle which is in Colorado Springs, they started to restrict people from telecommuting who live within 50 miles of the company building. Last I heard, there is talk to take it away. Those who live in different Mountain towns may have to move if they want to keep their job.

    1. Re:Changes to the Workplace from the Dot Com days by aschlemm · · Score: 3, Informative

      I guess I've been around too long in software development circles and don't see what the problem is. I've worked for a number of companies and we were always expected to work 5 days a week. Generally most of the companies I worked for had what we called "core hours" which were between the hours of 10AM and 4PM. These were the hours we're expected to be around for meetings etc. This also gives people the flexibility to come in from anywhere from 7:00AM to 10:00AM so long as we're around during core hours. I've never worked anyplace where people would take afternoons off during the work week.

      I have worked for a few companies there had a schedule where people could work nine 9 hour days in a row which then allowed a person to every other Friday off. I've always put in alot of hours in my programming jobs over the year since it goes with this sort of job. We don't do death marches but the programmers I work with know if they're behind or not and if they need to work an extra day or two on the weekend sometimes to catch up they do it. I never saw any of this "slacker" behavior where just because someone put in some extra hours on some days earlier in the work week that they're now entitled to take a few afternoons off during the week.

      I'm trying to sound like a hard ass but I was around as a programmer long before the dot.con boom and I'm still around after the bust. I've never ever had a programming job that was 9 to 5 and that just sort of goes with the job IMHO. At least now with VPN solutions available if I have to do some work on the weekend I can do it from home and not waste the time driving into the office. And with the IT downturn I'm doing alot more than just programming now. I'm also our office's part-time Oracle DBA and I'm also resposible for system admin duties for several Linux servers and a Win2K server.

      I do agree that you should be able to take the vacation time off that you've earned but I'm not real sympathetic about whether you can or can't take Thursday and Friday afternoon off. A reasonable manager may not care how many hours you work each week so long as you get all of your work done on time and done correctly. But your manager may also have a PHB putting pressure on him/her and so that pressure gets passed down to you.

  20. Mr.T by Sandman1971 · · Score: 4, Informative

    They forgot one other fad: Mr.T Ate My Balls (and original site). I have to admit, I never got that one.

    --
    It's better to burn out than to fade away