The homepage
Not a profile. Not a feed. A room you built yourself from view-source, borrowed GIFs, and unreasonable confidence.
A field note from before the machine-made web
When pages had authors, links were invitations, and going online felt like entering a place instead of opening a product.
WELCOME, TRAVELLER!
this site is best viewed with curiosity
and a 800 × 600 display
Downloading one 640 × 480 JPEG…
01 / SAVED TO FAVORITES
Not a profile. Not a feed. A room you built yourself from view-source, borrowed GIFs, and unreasonable confidence.
A blue underlined door to somebody’s obsession. No ranking model knew whether it was useful. You clicked anyway.
Proof that another person had crossed your tiny corner of the network—and took a moment to leave their name.
A handmade constellation. Previous, random, next. Discovery felt less like a funnel and more like getting lost.
02 / A MODEST PROPOSAL

The old web was not better because it was ugly or slow. It was better at showing its people.
Pages exposed their seams. A broken image, a tiled background, a strange font choice—each one revealed a decision made by a person who was learning in public.
We do not need to rebuild 1998. We can keep the useful part: authorship, surprise, finite spaces, eccentric links, and the feeling that somebody is home.
03 / YOU WERE HERE
No account. No engagement score. Just leave a small mark on this page before you go.
*with contemporary tools and a long memorycool page!! love the stars ★
found you through the webring. keep building.
Optional Google Analytics and Microsoft Clarity measure content performance and usability. They load only if you allow them. Form values, email addresses, and chat messages are never included in analytics events.