Does anyone know of a plug-in or extension that will make your web browser convert all websites into what they would look like in 1999?
from TehBamski@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:21
https://lemmy.world/post/39980716

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

lordnikon@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:31 next collapse

theoldnet.com

TehBamski@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:39 collapse

Holy moly! This website is amazing. I wish it wasn’t hamstrung by Internet Archive’s rate limiting, though.

"The Internet Archive is rate limiting and then blocking this site due to increased usage. I have reached out to them. I also need to make some changes with this service to avoid hammering their API. Please check back after I’ve been able to get this fixed. "

deleted@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:40 next collapse

I’ve been thinking about it lately since the current state of the internet is awful.

Unfortunately, none exist that I’m aware of. I found this plugin just now but I’ve not tried it yet: chromewebstore.google.com/detail/retroweb/

mhzawadi@lemmy.horwood.cloud on 10 Dec 07:20 next collapse

You could turn off JavaScript and see how things look, most sites in the 90s didn’t have JavaScript

JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 08:13 next collapse

Sometimes you see almost that when css hasn’t loaded. Maybe you can turn off css in browser settings, site settings, or dev tools in the browser.

Yaky@slrpnk.net on 10 Dec 12:35 next collapse

There’s FrogFind, search engine + converter/proxy for old machines. Runs via non-secure HTTP of course, which was standard in 1999.

Some sites have simple variants, such as

text.npr.org

retro.hackaday.com

lite.duckduckgo.com/lite/

spiderhamster@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:26 collapse

You could use the browser, Links, from the command line. Its my go to browser for looking up reasons why KDE wont load. Also nice for loading only text on a page.