In the glory days of web 1.0, social websites would prominently link out to their digital neighbors via lists known as webrings; magical doorways to an expansive hinterland of digital villages.
Let’s envision what a truly federated chat like Matrix could do to improve the cross-connectivity of chat channels. Most of these features are already possible, they just haven’t been implemented yet in a community-oriented client experience.
forget all that we should just bring back web 1.0 webrings and domain cliques
Yeah, it’s weird that they talk about federated webrings, without actually suggesting federated webrings. I discuss it in passing here (and early in passing), calling it FedRing. It definitely seems doable as kind of plug-in to other services that is also a federated service - so you could jump from the sidebar in a Lemmy community or instance to a Mastodon account or channel.
We can bring back the cozy vibes of the old web neighborhoods. Not by regressing to a bygone era, but by building the web one-and-a-half that should have been; a Web of the People.
Weirdly, a while back I wrote:
It is increasingly clear to me that a lot of directions Web 1.0 was evolving in were diverted or just killed off by Big Tech’s landgrab which built walled gardens. I see the Fediverse as a return to the idea of blogs (micro and macro), forums, etc but in a more natural progression to interoperability. This still isn’t perfect and there may be other early web ideas, like webrings, that improve discoverablity.
It’s a pity they don’t really talk about federated webrings and largely ignore the opportunities for webrings in the wider Fediverse instead focusing on Matrix and Discord.
And I was thinking we needed Web 2.0b, they are suggesting an early “fork” Web 1.5.
I want to be part of matrix but don’t know where to start. Any retro-gaming matrix?
As you are on here, the best place to start might be lemmy.world on Matrix. Or to jump straight to retro gaming, there are a few listed on matrixrooms.info.