| ▲ | JediBurrell 18 hours ago | |||||||||||||
I for one am glad that blink is no longer a thing, it's certainly behavior that should require more thought than a simple html element can provide. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | tombert 17 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
I just kind of feel like removing it makes the internet less fun. 90's internet was basically a playground for geeky people to make things purely for fun, with basically no ambitions of making any money; people would host their own terrible web pages. My first real introduction to "programming" (other than making a turtle walk around) was when I was nine years old and bought "Make Your Own Web Page : A Guide for Kids" from my school, and this was something a nine year old kid could do because the web was easy and fun to program for. There weren't a billion JavaScript frameworks, CSS was new (if it was even supported), everything was done with tags and I loved it. Yeah, the sites would be ugly and kind of obnoxious, but there was, for want of a better word, a "purity" to it. It was decidedly uncynical; websites weren't being written to satisfy a corporation like they all are now. You had low-res tiling backgrounds, a shitty midi of the X-files theme playing on a bunch of sites, icons bragging about how the website was written in Notepad, and lots and lots of animated GIFs. I feel like the removal of blink is just a symptom of the web becoming more boring. Instead of everyone making their own website and personalizing it, now there's like ten websites, and they all look like they were designed by a corporation to satisfy shareholders. | ||||||||||||||
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