internet

  • 08 Mar

    Say Hello To My Internet Friends

    Like most people, I have acquired a few nicknames during my time on this planet.  I’ve mentioned before ones like Hotshoe, Heinous, Christafuh, Erty, Channas and Issypher, but I recently came across a completely forgotten forum that fostered a few others.

    We hear a lot these days about the permanency of the Internet, you know warnings like, “ONCE IT’S ON THE INTERNET IT’S THERE FOREVER!!!!”  But there’s a flip-side to that.  Some things that are not dangerous and can give you a fun trip down memory lane stay on the Web too.

    In the spring of 2002, I saw a music video on TV (remember those days?) from someone I’d never heard of before and went to the Internet to check her out.  It was Vanessa Carlton, whom you surely know from this song:

    Her website back then had all the normal info you find from any artist, from the quick bio to tour stops and information about their albums.  Like many others at the time, it also had a message board, and after spending a few minutes browsing through, I felt the need to chime in on something and posted my first message.

    In the span of a few years, I would go on to post more than 1,000 messages, though 99.9999 percent of them were far from profound.  During that time, I noticed a group of people who talked about similar interests or just seemed like cool peeps, and through both our board postings and later AIM chatting, I got to know a few of them quite well.  They were the first of what I call my “Internet friends,” which at the time was a weird concept to many, but now I think is much more relatable in our Facebook/Twitter experiences.

    That’s where I got those extra nicknames, like Ti.  Ti is short for Tiem, which this girl Kelley started calling me to make fun of the fact that in AIM convos I always made a typo when trying to write “time.”  The original forum no longer exists, but thanks to the cool Wayback Machine, I was reminded that Kelley and I also had a super important running debate about the merits of wearing socks:

    That original forum often had issues, and eventually someone made a new message board that we all migrated to.  It’s there that Kelley, who is a few years younger than me, posted about the time she and I met in real life:

    She was looking at colleges and where I went happened to be on her list, so we planned to say hi and chat for a minute after her official tour.  Since you know me, you’ll find it funny how SUPER sketched out her mom was about the whole idea of her talking to this random guy.  That meant our meeting took place in an open spot just across the street from a parking lot where Kelley’s mom was watching from the car.  She didn’t end up going to school there, and we eventually lost touch.

    The name Erty (the Ert Movement was big at the time) was bestowed by another person whose life is a mystery to me now.  The biggest thing I remember about her is that she for a long time told everyone she was roughly my age, then made this big dramatic post one day admitting that she was in fact like five years younger.  She expected everyone to hate her and never speak to her again…but absolutely zero people cared.  Good times.

    I haven’t had an actual conversation in a long time with the girl who started calling me Chewy (a play on chwilbur), but we are Facebook friends and more or less aware of each other’s lives (hey, Jiggy!).

    I feel like we need a music break, so enjoy one of my more favorite songs from Carlton’s first album:

    The cool thing about having Internet friends is that you aren’t constrained by geography.  My three closest ones from that era are an Australian, a Brazilian who lives in Japan and a Spaniard who lives in Britain.

    Nerea, my Spanish friend, wished me happy birthday back in 2004 in a thread that was the equivalent of waking up to your birthday today and seeing a million notifications on Facebook:

    She and I haven’t been in the closest contact over the years, but we check in from time to time.  Finding this last week reminded me to do that, and naturally we both lamented how old we feel now that it’s been almost 10 years since she posted that message.

    Katie, the Australian, and Juliane, the Brazilian, I talk to all the time, and while our conversations are often about television and ridiculous things, there have also been the kinds of moments you expect with any good friends.  We’ve talked about moving far from home, jitters about starting new jobs, our families, differences in our home towns, dating and counseling each other when we’ve lost people close to us. 

    Another thing I gained from that message board was the ability to use Photoshop.  The system allowed you to embed pictures in your posts, and everyone made “signatures” that were sort of personal flags that said something about them or their fandom.  Here’s an example (though not one I made) at the top of this thread in which I gave a British girl grief for how they spell neighbors:

    Only certain people had the technical ability to make them, and after teaching myself the basics for my own use, I often took requests and made graphics for others.  So every time you see a picture on here that took me five seconds to prepare for the Web, the root is in those early forum postings.

    Of course, there is a downside to knowing somebody only virtually.  Just like with texting, it’s easy to miss context and to create things in your mind when you don’t speak to someone in person.  I found in my messages a note from a girl who somehow decided I hated her:

    Don’t worry, I assured her there was no problem, though she is not one of the people I kept in contact with at all.  Oh well.

    This post is entirely too long, so I will close with one final anecdote from that era.  My inbox has a number of messages from Kelley talking about the “random PM game.”  PMs are private messages, or the email-like system on the forums.  You can send one to any registered member, and from tiem to tiem Kelley and I would PM each other a random username.  The game was that we had to send a message to that person, say something nice and send a copy back to the other player to see what we wrote.

    When I think about the comments you see on YouTube or any news article today, the random PM game might be my favorite memory of the forum era.  Today’s Internet could use more random compliments.

  • 18 Oct

    You Too?!

    BuzzFeed has made quite a name for itself by compiling the modern listicle, numbered sets usually adorned with animated GIFs that are supposed to make you laugh or remember something fondly from your childhood.

    Just when you think they have done every possible topic, they roll out a new one.  It’s a never-ending factory of things like “21 Times ‘The Simpsons’ Bizarrely Predicted The Future” or “The 25 Whitest Things That Have Ever Happened” (several of which involve horrendously failed high-fives).

    But I came across one last week that was potentially eye-opening:  “36 Things You Never Realized Everyone Else Does Too.”

    Obviously not everyone does them, and neither do I, but there are a few that stood out as particularly entertaining.

    1. On a road trip, you start to think of the other cars as your travel companions, and feel a tinge of sadness when you exit the highway.

    This makes me think of my journeys driving home from college.  It was a three-hour trip, straight down Route 15 from central Pennsylvania to Virginia.  Along the way, I often ended up cruising along with the same cars for long stretches of time, sometimes 20 minutes, sometimes two hours.  I talked to them using their license plate state as their name.  “Come on, New York! I’m giving you plenty of space to get in this lane before you catch up to that truck!”  The moment they exited, I bid them farewell the same way.  I tried not to cry.

    4.  You’d rather take an inferior parking spot and walk than stress yourself out looking for the perfect spot.

    I worked in retail for a long time, including almost two years at a large mall.  I can’t tell you the number of times I watched as people patrolled the first two rows of parking in the garage waiting for someone to show up and free up a parking space.  While they were cruising, I stuck my car in the first convenient-enough spot and walked inside to continue my day, because after all, what’s a few more steps when you’re going to be walking around the mall anyway?  Life is too short.

    11.  You need a fan blowing on you as you sleep because you like being buried under covers.

    Best feeling ever.

    16.  You always feel weird saying your name out loud.

    Not so much my name, but when I lived for a while in Florida, I was really self-conscious about the way I said the name of my street.  Because of that, I also became aware of just how often I needed to give my address to someone.  My apartment was on Hanging Rock Court, and for some reason the “Hanging” part always sounded so odd when it came out of my mouth, as if I wasn’t pronouncing all of the word and my pizza or cable service was going to get misdirected.  Say it with me now, han-GING.

    24.  You need to check behind the shower curtain every time you go in the bathroom.

    If you go into my bathroom, the shower curtain is always open for this very reason.  If I’m at your house, there’s a 20 percent chance I will check.  BONUS: I also sometimes check the back seat of my car at night to make sure no one is han-GING out back there waiting to strangle me as I drive.  Blame Hollywood for that one.

    26.  You OFTEN feel phantom phone vibrations in your pocket even when your phone didn’t vibrate.

    This doesn’t happen OFTEN to me (the caps are a bit intense here), but it does happen.  I try to be cool and not check my phone.

    32.  You immediately forget someone’s name right after they’ve introduced themselves.

    This does happen OFTEN.  I think it’s at the point that I don’t even try anymore.

    34.  You refuse to accept “jif” as the proper pronunciation of GIF.

    I will never accept this.  You shouldn’t either.

    By cjhannas internet Uncategorized
1 2
Archives