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Stroll down memory lane with this 1996 instructional video on How To Internet

The Internet Archive's extensive library is a veritable treasure trove of digital content, including media from now-defunct formats like VHS, with the goal of preserving our cultural heritage. Case in point: a 1996 video, Everything You Need To Know About... Introduction to the Internet (listed as 95021 in what one assumes is a series), was recently uploaded to the archive.

Even the minimal technical requirements to log on convey a sense of just how far we've come since then in terms of sheer computing power. Viewers needed a Macintosh or IBM (or IBM compatible) personal computer loaded with either Windows 3.11 or Windows 95; a modem capable of 14.4 transmission or higher; "at least" 8MB of RAM; and a minimum 500MB hard drive. (For comparison, the 2020 MacBook Pros come with 16GB, 32GB, or  64GB of onboard memory, and 1TB of hard drive storage, configurable to 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB.)

It's probably a good thing that we don't get any period sound effects, because the classic sound of a dial-up modem connecting—ever so slowly—would no doubt evoke painful memories for those times one's connection kept dropping and one had to reconnect over and over again, just to send a few measly emails. Dial-up access is still used in particularly rural or remote areas where broadband hasn't yet been installed, but it's approaching extinction: a 2013 Pew Survey found that just 3 percent of US adults still relied on dialup at that point.

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from Gaming & Culture – Ars Technica https://ift.tt/3qWFP82

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