Neocities: Create your own free website

103 points
1/21/1970
a day ago
by Tomte

Comments


president_zippy

I absolutely love neocities, I use it to host my goatse mirror (goatse.live).

a day ago

cryo32

A friend of mine wanted somewhere to host goatse for random QR codes he’s planning of sticking everywhere. Problem solved :)

a day ago

president_zippy

To commemorate this occasion, I updated goatse.live with a slightly-improved copy of the ascii art from the goatse.ru mirror:

https://goatse.live/ascii

7 hours ago

president_zippy

By God, that's on another level. I'd be honored to have QR codes stuck to random walls and doors all over major cities linking to my shock site mirror!

a day ago

bilegeek

At least until a prosecutor tries to charge them with a sex crime, and you get caught in the trouble.

a day ago

hoppp

For a moment I questioned reality and the world...thinking...does the word goatse have another meaning?

So I checked your website...nope..it still means the same thing lol

a day ago

ianmf

Thanks for taking one for the team. I was about to do the same.

a day ago

ivan_gammel

It is weird that neither About, nor Terms or Contact pages mention who actually is behind this project. No name, no clear legal status, but collecting money and personal data of users. It may be a well-known service, but the number of users does not make it more trustworthy.

a day ago

nicolas_

You can find lots of articles online about its founder. He’s even on HN. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13445181

a day ago

simoncion

> It is weird that...

Doesn't strike this USian at all as weird. This describes most online entities that I interact with. Plus, there's always the site's contact form that you can use to ask for the information you want.

What makes me trust it a whole lot are this triplet of facts

1) AFAICT, neither their privacy policy nor their terms of service have been changed in more than a decade.

2) They do not require you to give up your right to access the courts in order to use their service.

3) The backend code is open source.

a day ago

CM30

Have to be honest, while I like the concept of these services, I've never really found the motivation to use them. If I'd came across Neocities in the 90s or 00s I'd have been all over it, but it's hard to justify today when I'm already paying for web hosting elsewhere. It's like, if a more powerful solution exists elsewhere, I struggle to work within the limitations of a more restrictive one.

a day ago

skrebbel

You're not the target audience. My son is 13 and has his own website, started to learn HTML when he was 11. All I did was tell him about Neocities (and allow him to sign up) and he figured out the rest.

a day ago

zeeZ

This is very similar to how I started out almost thirty years ago. Static files, a complicated JavaScript navigation, maybe even entirely flash based! Not everyone needs a hyperscaler!

a day ago

flyingshelf

You said it yourself: you're already paying. Lots of people don't want to pay, so they use this for their hobby.

a day ago

[deleted]
a day ago

j45

The majority of folks won't be setting up their own web-hosting, and this can fit them.

We have to remember that everything doesn't have to be for everyone to be valid or reasonable.

a day ago

cellular

Can i add software for people to download?

It seems dropbox is the only free solution but they make it look like you need to register to download (Dark pattern?).

a day ago

Cyberdog

You can host arbitrary files on it but Neocities isn't really intended as a file host along the lines of Dropbox. It's more for hosting general-purpose web sites.

a day ago

Jigsy

I do like neocities. Especially when designing KISS principle websites. (Modern web design has become RAM eating garbage...)

Ended up stumbling on bsgen-new.neocities.org hosted there last week; which is used for generating blue sphere codes in Sonic. All 128 million of them.

14 hours ago

alliao

awww geocities how much have world changed since, it was an era of stranger danger don't get in strangers car world. It was about connection online however, no matter who they are, post your corner of the world online for all to see, hoping to strike up some connection. It was about tiny pictures, midi files because we have no bandwidth. We were optimistic, eager, and already had to filter out the paedophiles by pretending to be a 60/f/china. I miss the era for sure, the optimism especially, we truly believed internet would bring so much progress, world peace wasn't even that far away even.

To get a hint of the backdrop.. https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/1993-rabin-and-ar...

a day ago

6c696e7578

I remember .mod music files more than midi

https://modarchive.org/index.php?request=view_by_moduleid&qu...

a day ago

prmoustache

Mods were useful to share music mafe with samples, however midi files could be played on a browser and were thus more common as asset for a website although nearly everybody hated it when a website would automatically play a midi file.

a day ago

6c696e7578

Yep for the web they worked better. I don't remember midi files getting as close to popular music as mods did. Then mp3 happened and you could download an MP3 in about quarter of an hour in that era. You could hear a midi though in the browser, but mod wasn't as convenient.

13 hours ago

malwrar

One of my personal faves on that site: fauux.neocities.org

a day ago

soundworlds

Hah, I was just deep diving into Serial Experiments Lain. Cool site!

a day ago

deflator

Love it! My first website was on Angelfire, and I am still at it 30 years later. It made an impression on me.

But I can't think of a good play on words for Angelfire either

13 hours ago

soundworlds

Neocities is one of the few websites I go to restore my faith in the future of the internet - it's the healthiest online creative community I've come across!

a day ago

viccis

If only a cynical Frenchman had written a book critiquing peoples' tendency towards simulating things that don't exist.

Neocities is cool, but the medium is the message and we've generally moved on from this (treasured!) past. Any attempt to replicate it tends to wind up hyperreal and forced.

a day ago

spwa4

Does it even properly implement the <blink> tag?

a day ago

omoikane

Not sure about <blink>, but I sampled a few random sites from their gallery[1] and all of them have <marquee>. <marquee> is deprecated[2] and no longer scrolls in Firefox, but still works in Chrome.

[1] https://neocities.org/browse

[2] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/...

a day ago

argee

> <marquee> is deprecated

For some reason the Indian government LOVES marquee, to the point where it's almost a hallmark. Looks like marquee...finds a way.

[0] https://www.mygov.in/

[1] https://www.mea.gov.in/

[2] https://ociservices.gov.in/onlineOCI/

[3] https://www.passportindia.gov.in/psp

a day ago

Cyberdog

I don’t think Firefox or its ancestor Netscape Navigator ever supported <marquee>. It’s a non-standard tag that IE introduced and was pretty widely despised at the time (as was <blink> but at least text blighted by the latter stays put).

a day ago

Cyberdog

Neocities just hosts web sites. It's up for the author of the site to write a page with <blink> (if they really want to), then for the browser that visitors use to visit that site to implement its functionality. The web host has nothing to do with it.

a day ago

alex1138

The death of Districts kills me. As far as I know this was baked into the origin Geocities (Yahoo, why the fuck did you buy it and then shut it down? albeit, 10 years later, but still). Neocities? It was a page someone made, and it's now a spinning rat image because of one tantrum or another

a day ago

casey2

a day ago