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The Film Death Line - What Stations?
On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote:
Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
On 2015\09\28 20:07, Offramp wrote:
On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote: Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! Never mind the 16 year gap between the question and answer. |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
In article ,
Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\09\28 20:07, Offramp wrote: On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote: Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! Never mind the 16 year gap between the question and answer. It took that long to decypher 'Minardor'. Nick -- "The Internet, a sort of ersatz counterfeit of real life" -- Janet Street-Porter, BBC2, 19th March 1996 |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
On Monday, September 28, 2015 at 8:13:13 PM UTC+1, Basil Jet wrote:
On 2015\09\28 20:07, Offramp wrote: On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote: Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! Never mind the 16 year gap between the question and answer. And in those 16 years nobody bothered to Google, (or possibly Netscape it back then)! According to Wikipedia, the film was shot at Aldwych and Holborn. Neill |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
wrote:
On Monday, September 28, 2015 at 8:13:13 PM UTC+1, Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\09\28 20:07, Offramp wrote: On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote: Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! Never mind the 16 year gap between the question and answer. And in those 16 years nobody bothered to Google, (or possibly Netscape it back then)! According to Wikipedia, the film was shot at Aldwych and Holborn. Did Netscape ever have a search engine? I don't recall one. I think back then Yahoo, Excite, Ask (Jeeves) or MSN would have been the most likely candidates. In those early days, I used a search aggravation engine that farmed out queries to multiple engines and combined the results, as no single engine had comprehensive coverage of the then tiny Web. Google was just getting started but didn't stand out back then. |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
On 2015\09\29 14:48, Recliner wrote:
wrote: On Monday, September 28, 2015 at 8:13:13 PM UTC+1, Basil Jet wrote: On 2015\09\28 20:07, Offramp wrote: On Saturday, 4 September 1999 08:00:00 UTC+1, gl1 wrote: Mind The Doors!!! Isn't it (in the film) Mind the Gap! Never mind the 16 year gap between the question and answer. And in those 16 years nobody bothered to Google, (or possibly Netscape it back then)! According to Wikipedia, the film was shot at Aldwych and Holborn. Did Netscape ever have a search engine? I don't recall one. I think back then Yahoo, Excite, Ask (Jeeves) or MSN would have been the most likely candidates. In those early days, I used a search aggravation engine that farmed out queries to multiple engines and combined the results, as no single engine had comprehensive coverage of the then tiny Web. Google was just getting started but didn't stand out back then. That sounds like Metacrawler. I think Altavista was the single most popular one. |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
In message
-septem ber.org, at 13:48:15 on Tue, 29 Sep 2015, Recliner remarked: And in those 16 years nobody bothered to Google, (or possibly Netscape it back then)! According to Wikipedia, the film was shot at Aldwych and Holborn. Did Netscape ever have a search engine? I don't recall one. I think back then Yahoo, Excite, Ask (Jeeves) or MSN would have been the most likely candidates. In those early days, I used a search aggravation engine Perhaps it was very aggravating, but I expect they intended to be aggregating. that farmed out queries to multiple engines and combined the results, as no single engine had comprehensive coverage of the then tiny Web. Google was just getting started but didn't stand out back then. Yahoo was more of a collection of human-researched links and didn't have a search engine until 2002, MSN only started search in 1998, didn't really settle down until 2005, and in 2009 was rebranded Bing. Ask Jeeves wasn't until 1997 (about the same date as Google). Before Google, people used AltaVista (1994, which evolved to a Usenet-only search) and Lycos (1994 again). -- Roland Perry |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
Roland Perry wrote:
In message -septem ber.org, at 13:48:15 on Tue, 29 Sep 2015, Recliner remarked: And in those 16 years nobody bothered to Google, (or possibly Netscape it back then)! According to Wikipedia, the film was shot at Aldwych and Holborn. Did Netscape ever have a search engine? I don't recall one. I think back then Yahoo, Excite, Ask (Jeeves) or MSN would have been the most likely candidates. In those early days, I used a search aggravation engine Perhaps it was very aggravating, but I expect they intended to be aggregating. Drat! The perils of an iPad that thinks it knows what you meant better than you... that farmed out queries to multiple engines and combined the results, as no single engine had comprehensive coverage of the then tiny Web. Google was just getting started but didn't stand out back then. Yahoo was more of a collection of human-researched links and didn't have a search engine until 2002, MSN only started search in 1998, didn't really settle down until 2005, and in 2009 was rebranded Bing. Ask Jeeves wasn't until 1997 (about the same date as Google). Before Google, people used AltaVista (1994, which evolved to a Usenet-only search) and Lycos (1994 again). What would people have been using in 1999-2000? I have no recollection of which engine I was using back then, apart from the parallel aggregate search engine whose name also escapes me. |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
In message
-septem ber.org, at 15:27:17 on Tue, 29 Sep 2015, Recliner remarked: Yahoo was more of a collection of human-researched links and didn't have a search engine until 2002, MSN only started search in 1998, didn't really settle down until 2005, and in 2009 was rebranded Bing. Ask Jeeves wasn't until 1997 (about the same date as Google). Before Google, people used AltaVista (1994, which evolved to a Usenet-only search) and Lycos (1994 again). What would people have been using in 1999-2000? I have no recollection of which engine I was using back then, apart from the parallel aggregate search engine whose name also escapes me. Altavista which was rapidly overtaken by Google. -- Roland Perry |
The Film Death Line - What Stations?
"Recliner" wrote Before Google, people used AltaVista (1994, which evolved to a Usenet-only search) and Lycos (1994 again). What would people have been using in 1999-2000? I have no recollection of which engine I was using back then, apart from the parallel aggregate search engine whose name also escapes me. I was using AltaVista (somewhat later some fool redirected all UK references to AltaVista.com to AltaVista.co.uk which showed me a blank screen. I moved to Google.). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AltaVista As of 1998, it used 20 multi-processor machines using DEC's 64-bit Alpha processor. Together, the back-end machines had 130 GB of RAM and 500 GB of hard disk space, and received 13 million queries every day.[8] This made AltaVista the first searchable, full-text database of a large part of the World Wide Web. The Usenet search and post was Deja https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Groups#Deja_News -- Mike D |
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