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Dot-Com Service Memories?

Buster Chan asks: "As the dotcom boom was still going strong in 1998, there was a service called MyTalk, which I used to send/recieve e-mail/voicemail/telephone calls/horoscopes and so forth, for free; it was mostly a unique, ad-driven way to avoid paying a quarter for telephone calls from payphones. Most of the ads were recruitment ads for the U.S. Army. MyTalk was a major tool for my online socialization when I was seventeen. Does anyone else have fond memories of MyTalk, or know of similar services that exist for free nowdays, or does anyone remember using interesting, unique services from the dotcom boom that no longer exist?"

38 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. My fondest memory by CptChipJew · · Score: 3, Funny

    Was that SuperBowl commercial right after the burst where they showed a wrecking ball destroying buildings for .com's that were clearly really stupid ideas.

    My favorite: eSocks.com

    --
    Vonal Declosion
    1. Re:My fondest memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      It was a commercial, they were all made up parodies of the whole .com situation. Lots of companies tried selling lots of useless services on the Internet.

    2. Re:My fondest memory by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Funny

      My fondest memory of that era : jobs.

      Please God let there be one more tech boom, I promise not to piss it all away this time.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
  2. kozmo.com by Doobian+Coedifier · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What, like kozmo.com? Delivering movies and snacks was a good idea, in theory...but apparently not a sustainable business model. I knew bad things were coming when they started delivering Rolexes and other rediculously expensive things...

  3. Kozmo/Urban Fetch by autarkeia · · Score: 5, Funny
    The best service that went the way of the dodo during the boom was either Kozmo.com or Urban Fetch. Though they started out with video & DVD rentals, you could order ANYTHING from them. In one instance, our office was swelteringly hot during the summer. I hopped onto Urban Fetch and ordered myself an air conditioner. I also ordered Palms, ice cream, videos, and Smith & Wollensky steaks.

    At one point Urban Fetch dropped off a "free" CD along with a DVD rental that the bicycle delivery people had "written, produced, and directed." It was horrible-- all I can remember was something about "what can we fetch fo' u?" rapped to nasty pseudo-hip-hop music. I scrawled a "please never deliver one of these promos to me again" note on it and returned it alongside my DVD rental.

    Ahh, the good old days.

    1. Re:Kozmo/Urban Fetch by The+Cydonian · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Googled it up, and found a very amusing article about it:-
      Although he did not say specifically how many DVDs BigStar ordered from Urban Fetch, company sources say they ordered close to $5,000 worth of DVDs before Urban Fetch established a limit of one DVD per order yesterday. "We were glomming for a few days," says Friedensohn. "Now we might switch to ice cream, which they also seem to sell below wholesale. Or maybe their VC can just send us the cash directly."
      Somes it up nicely, doesn't it? :-)
  4. AllAdvantage by Strike · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, it actually didn't provide me with anything ... but it paid WAY better. I was the first person that I knew of in my circle of friends at my university who signed up for it, so I got a lot of friends and their friends and their friends ... ad inf. to sign up and as a result I started banking some decent cash. At one point I was making upwards of $150 a month for having a mouse emulator just do random clicks for 8-10 hours a night a few days a month.

    1. Re:AllAdvantage by RevAaron · · Score: 4, Interesting

      you may have ahd a mouse emulator, but i got you beat- i built a lil contraption with my lego mindstorms and a taken-apart trackball... hooked that shit up with alladbantage+everything else... i think there was about a 640x180 of usable space on the screen. but i didn't care- i did it whilst i sleapt, and in vmware. eh eh eh. worked like a charm, and nothing could detect it- alladvantage could sniff out a lot of the click emus later on... :D

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  5. The good old days... by BigZaphod · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember back in 1998 when email was still pretty useful and not so spam-filled. And how ICQ wasn't entirely bogged down in crap and was still mostly just a messenger. What happened to those services?

    1. Re:The good old days... by alphaseven · · Score: 3, Informative

      ICQ is still around, I think most Americans have abandoned it but it's still used a lot in Canada and Europe and places AOL hasn't that strong a foothold. Not to say AIM isn't popular in Canada but a lot of people still use ICQ up here.

  6. Re:um, yeah by Alphanos · · Score: 4, Funny
    know of similar services that exist for free nowdays, or does anyone remember using interesting, unique services from the dotcom boom that no longer exist?

    Yeah, its called going outside and talking to people.

    So going outside and talking to people is a unique service that no longer exists:)?

    --
    Alphanos
  7. Banner Driven Software by Moderator · · Score: 3, Informative

    I remember DesktopDollars, which was a system where you were paid to have advertisements placed at the top of the desktop. It promised $150 an hour. I made $7 in three months.

    I also remember Juno and NetZero providing free internet, the later of which now charges $14.95 a month for dialup.

    --
    The World is Yours.
  8. Napster by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Can't have this thread without mentioning Napster at its peak.

    I was lucky enough to be working for a cybercafe/reseller/small ISP at the time and had access to some serious bandwith. It was during this period I managed to track down all the rare songs I hadn't heard in years. I must have downloaded dozens of tracks a day.

    Good times

    --
    Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
  9. broadpoint.com by crow · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I used a similar service through broadpoint.com. It worked like a prepaid phone card, only you earned minutes before the call was connected by listening to ads. The big downside to it was that if you listened to enough ads to have a nice conversation and then got a busy signal, your time was wasted because the minutes wouldn't carry over to the next call.

    At the end, they limited the number of free minutes per month before shutting down entirely.

    Going there now, it seems to be some sort of web directory.

  10. Zombo.com by Ieshan · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, if you can't find a more specific service, you can do everything at Zombo.com. Anything. Welcome. Anything. You can do anything at Zombo.com.

  11. DialPad.com by vasqzr · · Score: 5, Interesting


    It still exists today but it's not the same. I used to use it to make free calls back home all the time. It worked great for calling relatives, long distance relationships...j

    Basically you signed up for free, then dialed the number with your mouse, and used your microphone/headphone to talk in full duplex. Very good sound quality, even with a 56k modem. You'd hear a "thank you for using dialpad.com" and it would call your destination. Completely transparent, no operators involved. The other party had no idea.

    It was also great for prank calls. The calls seemed to get routed to a local number, so they couldn't call you back with *69 or caller ID. I'm sure a subpoena could though...

    Nothing like stalking an ex-girlfriend anonymously, without having to buy a pre-paid cellular phone.

    After a while, DialPad started limiting calls to ten minutes, then they started charging...

    1. Re:DialPad.com by bhtooefr · · Score: 2, Informative

      I remember DialPad. I also remember that their POS Java applet did not work well at all. Come to think of it, sound quality SUCKED ASS on a 33.6K, too. I also distinctly remember DialPad bluescreening multiple boxes running Win95 or Win98.

    2. Re:DialPad.com by Buster+Chan · · Score: 2, Funny

      Friends told me about dialpad, but MyTalk was more useful because of its portability. You needed a computer in order to place calls over dialpads telephone/computer network, but you could access MyTalk's long-distance network of connected telephones/computers from any phone in continental North America. In the early days of MyTalk, I was exploiting the system by being a "telephone tourist" -- I'd call as far North in Canada as I could, and as far south in Mexico as I could, and I'd call places like Carnegie Hall and Hollywood and Niagra Falls... and I still look back at those memories with joy. Now I've got a crappy job in a callcenter, and I must annoy those exact places with market research surveys; it's ironic, in a way, that the very places I called for fun are now being called by me at work as part of a torturous job that not only tortures me, but also tortures the people I'm calling at all hours of the day, to ask them questions regarding things about which they have no reason to give a damn.

      --
      "I am a fictional character."
  12. Slashdot by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Funny

    I miss /. they was it used to be, when tech articles didn't have to be written to a 3rd grade level to get more than 20 posts.

    1. Re:Slashdot by Brandybuck · · Score: 4, Funny

      "Hey, don't just put some guys name on the article blurb and expect us to know who he is! Please explain why I should care what this Richard M. Stallman fellow has to say."

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  13. interesting, unique services from the dotcom boom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    umnn, getting a decent, steady paycheck?

  14. Free Parties by cyranoVR · · Score: 4, Funny

    One public service my NYC dot-com provided was parties. Of course, these shindigs were intended as exclusive events with closely guarded invitation lists...but as you might expect, after about an hour everything would go out the window.

    Bar-hoppers would see the line outside our offices and assume they had stumbled upon a new night club or spontaneous rave, and would proceed to talk their way in. We gave everyone nametags as they entered - I rember this one time I saw a guy that had written "SINGLE" on his. Yeah, those were some wacky times.

    Of course, the parties themselves sucked compared to what other (bigger) dot-coms were doing - no caviar, no jumbo-tron screen, no smoke machine, no go-go dancers...but they're still in business though, so I guess that was the right thing to do?

  15. Oh beans, mytalk... by dacarr · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I got one email from them. A friend sent me one, it was a 2 MB .wav file over a dialup. Lovely. And they wouldn't accept a response by MP3.

    Things I miss are the sites where you could get free webspace to do whatever with, and not have to fart around with banner ads, popups, etc. Granted that's moot since I have a friend who hosts one of my sites.

    --
    This sig no verb.
  16. Some guy in a suit dot com by jonesvery · · Score: 5, Funny
    My favorite dot com service was "some guy in a suit dot com."

    As I recall, this service started up in 1997 or so. Some guy in a suit knocked on my door and said, "I hear that you know about this 'internet' thing -- I'll leave a big sack of money outside the door of your apartment every two weeks if you'll show up at my office for a couple of hours each day and sit there playing video games."

    After that, about every three months or so a different guy in a suit (at least I think it was a different guy) would knock on my door and say, "I hear that you know about this 'internet' thing, and I also hear that there's still room for more sacks of money in your apartment; if you'll show up at my office for a couple of hours each day, and tell me that 'the rules have changed,' and that I 'don't get it,' I'll leave a bigger sack of money outside your door every two weeks.

    I guess their their funding dried up or something.

    --

    * * *
    It is a dada story -- it has no moral.

  17. My favourite Dot-com memory by highwindarea · · Score: 3, Funny

    Reasonable chances of getting an job in IT .... that didn't require mocing to India.

    --
    I think this internet thing sounds like a good idea
  18. Ricochet. by torpor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Had a 128kb/s Ricochet Wireless modem, man that thing was sweet. Anywhere in LA, I could get on the 'net as fast as my home connection (128k partial T1) ... at the time, that was pretty trick.

    Had some great times in Griffith Park with that modem... so suck that they went under and couldn't manage their network, because it was huuuge to have wireless connectivity like that.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  19. Not really a service but a hiuge bottom line build by adzoox · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I used to take advantage of Buy.com's outreageous specials and free shipping deals. I was listing 20 epson printers on eBay a week in the summer of 2000. My price - shipped free overnight - was $50.00 - retail (lowest) for the exact same printer was $149.99. I shipped OVERNIGHT FOR FREE to ebayers. Lots of nice free feedback and profit - I sold them for $75-$90.

    When sites were ad driven (as the parent suggests) things were very cheap if you knew how to exploit them right.

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  20. TellMe by holland_g · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Used to make free calls from payphones using TellMe. A couple years later they dropped the payphone capabilities.


    You can still use them to get a couple of different services, but cellphone apps today have the same capability.


    Now their focus is VoiceXML applications.

    --
    Holland
    1. Re:TellMe by Buster+Chan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      With even rudimentary knowledge of VXML, you can still get away with some awesome stuff on TellMe! I used to use it all the time until their free service stopped being offerred in Canada. You can still access it free in the states, and when Canadians dial the American eight-hundred number (1-800-555-tell), we get a recording that says: "Oh, I'm sorry, but we currently don't offer our services in Canada. But you can still access all of our services, by calling us long-distance at..." -- and then they say the area code, and the number. TellMe survived in ways that MyTalk crumbled. I'll bet TellMe will evolve eventually into way more than what MyTalk was. MyTalk, and many of the other services that people mentioned in this discussion, are good ideas, but they weren't planned perfectly, because they were way ahead of their times. I hope their times come soon...

      --
      "I am a fictional character."
  21. Ahh, the Dot Com Boom, those were the days by k4_pacific · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Boy the way Steve Ballmer said,
    Unix now is finally dead,
    Windows was king they all said
    those were the days.
    Didn't need no business plan
    so said the investor man
    And now the stocks are in the can
    Those were the days.
    We all ran Windows 98
    Blue screens that we had to hate
    Gee our Packard Bell ran great
    Those were the days
    Mr. we can use a man like Linus Torvalds again
    Those were the days!

    --
    Unknown host pong.
  22. Groceryworks.com by DrLungoon · · Score: 2, Informative

    Groceries! Delivered! To your door! Did everything except put them up for you... *sigh*

    --
    Some people are like Slinkies - Not good for anything, but you can't help smiling when you push 'em down the stairs.
  23. jackpot.com by BTWR · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I did their opening promotion - you had to "play" a slot-machine game that came with 25 spins. Instead of cherries and bars, they were banners. Of course, you kept "winning more spins," so it took forever to finish an entire run. I had 25 friends sign up so that I could get a free Palm V (like $300 at the time) - I even signed up 30 just to be sure they wouldn't accuse me of cheating. Sure enough, they did. They would only send automated replies for like 2 weeks - even though I would email them all documented proof of my ~30 signups, until they just stopped replying at all. I sent one last email saying:

    "You win. This is my last email I will send you. I have written a report of my experience with you, where you scam college students with the lure of a free Palm pda and then get your exposure, then don't give them their prize. I am planning on sending this to CNN.com, ABCNEWS.com, Yahoo, MSNBC, etc"

    Wouldn't you know it, not 5 minutes later, the VP of the site emailed me. I had my Palm the next week.

  24. Some wakeup call service by BTWR · · Score: 2, Funny

    there was some dotcom for wakeup calls for free. My friend and I used to order them for people we hated in our house in college all the time! It was great! We'd hear a 5AM "Who the f--k keeps calling me?!?!?!?"

  25. Re:Not really a service but a hiuge bottom line bu by Monkelectric · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Yea remember when outpost.com had -- free air shipping? I used to order shit from them like a pack of CD-R's, they were rediculously cheap (14$ for a 50 pack), no tax, and they'd arrive the next morning. It was cheaper/easier then driving 9 miles out of my way to the closest best buy.

    14$ is STILL a pretty good price for 50cdrs, and this is three years later.

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  26. carorder.com - class A idiots by chuckfee · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This has got to be one of the dumbest moves of all time - selling cars at invoice through dealers who charged a lot more.

    Basically, you could go to carorder.com, select
    your car, and then they'd sell it to you. You'd
    deal with a local car dealer (or they'd truck it to you on a flatbed truck)

    I wanted a 1999 civic lx. Cheap, reliable transportation (especially when buying said vehicle at invoice) I had recently been in
    an accident and my old car was a total loss. This
    was in august/september of '99.

    A week or so later, the supply of '99 civics has dried up. They offer to sell me a 2000 civic at '99 invoice price (about $500 below 2000 invoice) if I wait for a month. Since I'm driving a rental courtesty of the idiot who totalled my last car I take the deal.

    About a month later (early october I think) I get
    a call from the dealer telling me my car is ready. I get there are check it out. We go in to sign the paperwork. I ask about the whole carorder.com deal.

    The dealer person says that they don't know the whole story, but a check arrived in the mail. She pulls the check out. It's from caroder.com and it's for about $2300.00. They basically gave
    me a free downpayment on my car. I asked if I could make a copy of the check. I framed it and posted it in my office.

    The moral of the story?

    Losing money on every sale but making it up in volume probably isn't a good idea, especially when you are losing $thousands per sale.

    Still, it was a sweet deal for me. The free TiVo I
    got at networld+interop in may of 2000 was also a nice runner up. These were the glory days of N+I with a private party every night in vegas.

    --chuck

  27. The list by Animats · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I maintained Deathwatch, the list of doomed dot-coms. It's still up, with the predicted death dates and a current stock chart. Most of the stock charts now say "Chart not available for this symbol", of course.

    Wierdly, some of them are still trading. Ziplink (ZIPL) is quoted at $0.0001 on NASDAQ. Their web site is still up, although most of the pages are bad links. Their last news item is "ZipLink, Inc. (NASDAQ: ZIPL), a wholesale Internet connectivity provider, today announced that the company plans to suspend its operations effective today, November 17, 2000."

    Despite this, the stock is still tradable, and a few people trade it each day.

  28. How to screw everyone??? by octalgirl · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know I am posting this so late, that no one may ever see it - but I just have to say, after reading through the replies - We were basically asked - what was cool, what do you miss about the dot.com era, and most of the replies are about how easy it was to screw over a vendor!!!! So many ppl found a way to profit over a vendor's attempt to offer a deal to the customer - buying online then selling it for more on eBay, while having the vendor ship for you?? Getting extra checks and just keeping them? Signing up to browse the web then having a mouse emulator do it for you?? The list goes on. Just one more element to add to the long list of failed business practices that led up to a very fateful economical crash. And some of those very same ppl who did the screwing, are now themselves screwed as they are unemployed, etc. Sheesh!!!

  29. Survival of the fittest by quinkin · · Score: 2, Interesting
    You have a point, but don't really consider the fact that the "customers" (scamming bastards or not) are an intrinsic part of the business environment.

    If the business model does not take into account the basic greed, selfishness and cunning of the environment, then it is doomed to failure.

    That is not to say that I agree with the actions of the above posters, but it is naive to believe that the companies did not bring it upon themselves.

    Q.

    --
    Insert Signature Here