Monthly Archives: February 2011

We use Ubuntu. It means that the last month of surfing through the Geocities archive was not only exciting, but painful. Ubuntu doesn’t support General MIDI playback. So we could see the players, we could read polite offers to click somewhere to turn off the music, but we couldn’t hear anything. To stop the torture we installed a virtual machine with Microsoft Windows, an operating system I hoped to never see again. But if I have to choose no MIDI on Linux or MIDI on Windows, I’ll choose the second.

As a reward the first page I landed has got an Anthem in background: the Anthem of Chile. The site is about glorious events in Chile’s military history and hosted in the Pentagon neighborhood.

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/6110/

Following links suggested by webmasters of SoHo and Heartland neighborhoods I came across TableMaker and FrameShop.

In the last days i visited a lot of collections of “sets”. And realized that they belong to different culture than collections of graphics.

“Free sets” were trying to achieve harmony and overcame the limitations of the browser. They are predecessors of templates.

“Free graphics” were web as it is. modular and wild. not trying to imitate anything.

I need to rearrange my timeline of webdesign by putting set makers in between amateurs and “professionals”.

And I was happy to meet this page. A “free set” met “free graphics”: border, divider, navigation buttons, the “welcome” header and background belong to a set and visually fit to each other. But the page’s author couldn’t resist to improve it with a 3D bullet graphic from somewhere else. And the latter dominates the page’s appearance.

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Lofts/5504/

If I use Dragan’s random.pl my every second destination is a file that was archived, but not downloaded yet. Every fourth page I get is German spam, and every third landing is happening at Heartland. And, though I thought that I knew every corner of Geocities, I see now that there are universes I never visited before.

Barbara is a true table master. Her trick is to nest a table into the table into the table. It was not at a unique technique, but Barbara’s little trick was to fill every second table with the goldfill1.jpg background.

This made her layouts really shiny.

Barbara is also the author of many precious bordered backgrounds: flowers, angels, butterflies and gems on a black backdrop.

Her terms of use are:

“My backgrounds are linkware. That means if you use them, you provide a link on your page back to this web site and that you send an e-mail message to let me know so I can add you to this page. I don’t feel that this is too much to ask.”

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Bluffs/1646/

In the web’s early days responsible webmasters were constantly excusing if they used many images on their home pages. It could take ages to download over dialup or even crash Netscape. The typical form was “heavy graphics coming up, click here to proceed”; the pictured JavaScript alert box would leave no choice though: users could (and still can) only click OK and hope for the best.

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Park/1571/

This is an a award! Given by LadyMadona. Ladymadona.com is a parked domain now. And archive.org says: “We’re sorry, access has been blocked by the site owner via robots.txt.”

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/Petsburgh/Farm/8331/

Homepage Sets are graphic collections of navigation buttons, backgrounds and dividers that somehow fit together. It would have been a stretch to call them templates because there was no pre-defined form for headlines, blurbs, photos or articles. For example this “executive set” contains most things one would need for a classic home page:

Backwards and Forward, Guestbook, Home Page, Links, Email, “own stuff” (e.g. writings), Help and Photos.

It was designed by “Shawna”, as well as dozens of other sets. Many Geocities users offered self-made sets like these, for anybody to copy and use. But Shawna was apparently able to sell some of her creations. She removed the data for sold sets, so it is not possible anymore to find out what made them commercially successful. Still this list can serve as a small market research on what topics could be interesting for today’s web designers, ordered by sales:

Animal sets:

Country sets:

Executive sets:

Fresh Flowers:

Flower sets:

Miscellaneous sets:

Victorian sets:

Genealogy sets:

Jeweled sets:

So, aspiring designers should put some work into their genealogy and jewel portfolios. What about creating WordPress and Gmail themes like these?

BTW, the categories Angels, Designer, Fantasy, Holiday, Kids and Masculine didn’t sell a single piece. This means something, Shawna has been in the biz since 1998.

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/coffeehouse/5922/

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Forest/7347/

“These borders are here for your use. Please DO NOT link directly to any of these graphics! Right click on the graphic and ‘save image as’ to save them to your own hard drive. Then upload the graphic to your directory to place on your homepage.”

Found at the graphics collection page of HPIP (Heartland Partners in Prayer). Very pre-cloud appeal. The instructions probably sound absolutely strange for todays users, who customize their profiles with free graphics.

On the bottom of the collection there is another note to the community members:

In other words: let’s share, but still lets keep some sites unique … please.

Btw, I didn’t remember that these types of backgrounds were called “borders”.

Original URL: http://www.geocities.com/hpip.geo/