Well, that’s not exactly what I would call funny: http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2009/02/t-shirt-hell-st.html
Category: Web
What’s happening to the web?
All over the place sites are suddenly going out of business. And no, I don’t mean those myriads of startups, that shut down their pages due to a poorly designed business model (or none at all). I’m talking about websites, that once held up the flag of free speech and off-mainstream information, art & ideas.
Two sites in particular, that I really liked for their unusual approach, shut down during the last months.
The first is TOTSE or the “Temple of the screaming electron” how the initiated call it. This site originated as a BBS back in the old days and hosted a huge number of text files on nearly every imaginable topic. This site brought up the concept of “user generated content” decades before it became a Web 2.0 buzzword. It’s very sad to see it go.
Read the site owner’s statement over here: TTFN
The second site that came to my attention, by shutting down recently, is T-Shirt Hell. A business selling shirts with questionable (and for some prudish folks even offensive) slogans. I found most of them really funny and it appears to me, that the people who where complaining about it, simply didn’t quite grasp the irony and criticism behind the phrases on the shirts.
You can read what T-Shirt hell has to say about the whole matter here: T-Shirt Hell says Goodbye
So is this a general trend? Did someone start a hunt on non-conformist folks and tries to get them “off the net”? I find it rather disconcerting to see sites shutting down, that where slightly off the main course of what the general public seems to consider “appropriate”.
Thanks to the guys running those sites, I’ll honour your work and it’s really sad to see you go!
Google search update
Google not only seems to have permanently activated their SearchWIKI functionality for me, but also something that could prove to be quite useful.
Each result which points to a forum- or comment-kind of conversation, now states the number of replies and the date of the last post in that thread.
(Click on the image to see a larger version.)
Monty Python YouTube channel
This is awesome 🙂
Monty Python decided to upload loads of their material to it’s own official YouTube channel.
See the clip below to hear them talk about their idea.
An exclusive preview of Wiretapping Sweden, a video that really needs to go viral
An exclusive preview of Wiretapping Sweden, a video that really needs to go viral
I can’t embed the video directly, because this is only a rough cut for “The Next Web” Blog. Just click on this link and enter “thenextweb” as password to watch.