reset-me-do

From: Peter (BOUGHTONP)13 Nov 17:34
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 9 of 14
A month ago I had a half-formed response to that, and decided to let it to coagulate before responding.

Except it didn't.

My thoughts were in the region of...
* Kinda cool as a protest against DNS, so long as a provider can guarantee a static address.
* There's still enough offline/verbal interaction for it to be impractical for many.
* I might have had a third point, but if so I forgot it. :(

From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)14 Nov 01:54
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 10 of 14
I've since had a "better" idea. We stop using DNS and, instead, just maintain a hosts file that we all share.
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP)14 Nov 18:19
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 11 of 14
I was thinking about when websites didn't need their own domains, and instead we joined neighbourhoods, and had curated directories which were more useful than searching.

Then I followed a rabbit hole and discovered NeoCities.

From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)15 Nov 04:19
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 12 of 14
Aware of Neocities! A friend uses it for his website.

Also, what I suggested is pretty much how name resolution worked on the early internet. And this woman was responsible for maintaining the hosts file.
From: Drew (X3N0PH0N)15 Nov 04:21
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 13 of 14
Also there are still tilde servers. Where you get a home directory and can serve pages from ~/username/ like back in the olden days.
From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX)15 Nov 10:53
To: Drew (X3N0PH0N) 14 of 14
There might be a bandwidth issue because everything is super lofi. Only use case I can come up with is under the radar stuff.

I'll allow it has a certain janky charm.
EDITED: 15 Nov 10:54 by DSMITHHFX