• xyzzy@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    My old homepage from nearly 10 years ago was a page that looked like it was straight out of the late '90s but was entirely valid HTML5 and CSS 3. That included an applet-like rippling water reflection effect beneath a photo of my city at the time, MIDI audio, JavaScript emulating the blink tag, and right-click “image save protection.”

    It was a total blast to make and people loved it, but being in the tech industry it kind of gave the wrong impression to hiring managers, so I swapped it for a much more boring page.

  • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 months ago

    Nice! Love the MIDI songs.

    I’ve been hankering to make a 90s era web page lately, myself. Just have to sit down and commit one of these evenings.

  • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    Tape drive! I had one of those back in the mid to late 90s, salvaged from my dad’s dead office PC. I was around 10, and the fact that it worked to take a part from a machine and put it into another, as well as the absolutely insane storage capacity of the tapes… felt like magic. No clue how I knew what to do, either, but it worked.

    Edit. Hazy on the specs, but I think it would have been a Pentium 1 (166MHz) with 16MB RAM, and 1.2GB HDD seems about right. Played the heck out of Rayman on that.

    • p1mrxOP
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      10 months ago

      That DI-30 tape drive was a couple years older than the rest of the system. That’s why it’s half the size of the hard drive. It was a consumer-grade format with somewhat janky proprietary software.

      • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 months ago

        I remember the software being very janky, too. But then again, that was Windows 95 days. 😅

        Monkey island for hours and hours. Man I had a good time with that PC. Thanks for bringing back those memories.