Monday, March 17, 2014

Mark's First Website



            My Yahoo email address is a constant reminder of Mark.  It is the “.geo” at the end of my name that is the link to the past.  It refers back to GeoCities, an early free website.[i]  Websites, “surfing the net”, and staring at a computer screen for hours were all relatively new experiences in 1995. 
            It had been a cold winter, and Mark sat in my office at the little color Mac for hours.  Browsers were a relatively new thing.  Internet Explorer made much more sense to the average person than had Gophers[ii] or even Mosaic[iii].  Mark would sit and click looking for law databases and coming across many other new and unique things such as GeoCities. 
            We both built websites.  Mine was a long rambling text proving the word “Woodstock” had taken on a specific meaning in the English language.  It was replete with citations from newspapers and magazines illustrating my point.  Mark’s was an exercise in HTML (hypertext markup language).  He enjoyed turning his letters into blinking colors, and adding clouds and other features such as links to the Supreme Court.  The actual message on his website was a warning that the site was protected under copyright law.  There was really no other content, but Mark was giving it some thought. 
            He was not neurotypical and could turn his laser mind to one idea.  For a while, it was his quest to discover what one sound when added to a website would gain worldwide attention.  Mp3 files were not common in 1995, but the little Mac was capable of recording and placing sound on the web.  Mark concentrated on this idea for days, asking my opinion over and over while waving his index finger in a circular motion towards the ceiling.
            He first spoke of Schma. [iv] Was I, he wondered, aware of Schma?  I admitted my awareness was sort of limited to the Michener novel The Source[v], and vague references to Hebrew School made by my Jewish ex-husband.  It could be chantable, but Mark thought that idea totally beside the point.  He was searching for the one important sound. Suggesting his favorite mantra[vi] was also not relevant as the implication was obvious.  “Om” was not the sound for which he searched. 
            Finally, as my patience started to fade, I said overall it was my opinion vowels had it above consonants as pure sound.  “Ahhh” was better than “llll”.  “Lah” was nice.  Mark burst into gales of laughter as though I had told him the best joke in the universe.  His laughter was contagious, and I joined in although the exact humor involved escaped me.  In retrospect, it was hearing his laughter that was good.  This jovial episode was the end of our conversation on sound, and we did not speak of it again.
            My endnotes come from Wikipedia, for the most part.  They are there to provide some context in time.


[i] David Bohnett and John Rezner originally founded GeoCities in late 1994 as Beverly Hills Internet (BHI). In its original form, site users selected a "city" in which to place their web pages. The "cities" were named after real cities or regions according to their content — for example, computer-related sites were placed in "SiliconValley" and those dealing with entertainment were assigned to "Hollywood" — hence the name of the site.

Ten years after Yahoo! bought GeoCities, the company announced that it would shut down the United States GeoCities service on October 26, 2009, and GeoCities websites actually became unavailable the next day. There were at least 38 million user-built pages on GeoCities before it was shut down. The GeoCities Japan version of the service is still available.

[ii] A system that pre-dates the World Wide Web for organizing and displaying files on Internet servers. A Gopher server presents its contents as a hierarchically structured list of files. With the ascendance of the Web, many gopher databases were converted to Web sites which can be more easily accessed via Web search engines.

Gopher was developed at the University of Minnesota and named after the school's mascot. Two systems, Veronica and Jughead, let you search global indices of resources stored in Gopher systems.
[iii] Mosaic was the first widely distributed graphical browser or viewer for the World Wide Web. It is usually considered to have been the software that introduced the World Wide Web and the Internet to a wide general audience. Once Mosaic was available, the Web virtually exploded in numbers of users and content sites. The success of Mosaic depended on the recent invention and adoption of Hypertext Transfer Protocol by Tim Berners-Lee.

Mosaic arrived in 1993. Marc Andreessen, then in his early 20s, is credited with inventing or leading the development of Mosaic. He developed it at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Illinois. Andreessen and others went on to become part of Netscape Communications, originally called Mosaic Communications. Netscape then produced what was, for a while, the world's most popular browser, Netscape Navigator.
[iv] Transliteration:  Sh’ma yis-ra-eil, A-do-nai E-lo-hei-nu, A-do-nai E-chad
[v] The Source is a historical novel by James A. Michener, first published in 1965. It is a survey of the history of the Jewish people and the land of Israel from pre-monotheistic days to the birth of the modern State of Israel. The Source uses for its central device a fictional tell in northern Israel called "Makor" (Hebrew: "source"?).
[vi] OM MANI PADME HUM

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