Great article, depressing situation
Web Revival
A movement focused on capturing the creativity and openness of the early Internet.
Elsewhere in the Fediverse:
A year or two ago I got pissed off with how slow to navigate deviantArt had become, I had had an account there for almost twenty years, and posting images for 10, I had thousands of photos there, but as the site developed over the later years it just got worse and worse.
Finally, one day I had had enough.
I borrowed space on my dad's webhost, and built a simple HTML/CSS page with links to galleries exported from digiKam.
The page has no ads, no tracking (other than what the webhost does) and no user interaction, it requires no database, every page loads in less than a second.
It makes zero accommodation for mobile users, I only view it on my desktop and use it to show my photos to people nearby or friends/family.
The galleries does have some more advanced features, you can navigate through them with the arrow keys, they also have some pre fetch stuff, but that's it.
I am no expert in web design, but the page looks good, I played with some :hover in CSS but didn't go completely mad with it.
I won't link it since it has my real name on it.
I'll probably move the site to my own webhost some day.
we lost our ability to curate the web.
Nope. I held onto mine like a floating door in the aftermath of the titanic.
Yeah, but folks on here are likely Web Grognards, who kept our skills honed and our powder dry for just this moment.
I was going to say it is our turn to step into the light ... But I think we all prefer dimly lit rooms.
I'd definitely need a high SPF sun cream for that!
Like a good breakfast cereal: Store in a dry, cool place, away from direct sunlight.