Soon dial-up Web access was available to most homes using a
modem and standard telephone line at laughable speeds today. But
the REAL kicker: Back then you paid by
the hour for every hour spent
online. We vividly remember checking a box which agreed to let America Online bill our credit card $6 per hour
to “Surf the Net.” There wasn’t much incentive
for internet providers to offer an all-you-could-eat data buffet, but market
competition drove things onward, upward, faster, and cheaper over time.
Still, during the transition people rationed the time they
spent online and---at least mentally---prioritized which websites they were
willing to visit. Too many
pictures on a site made it load intolerably slowly. Often the only reward at the end
of a wait was an “Error: Server Timed Out” message. It was the Web’s way of
saying, “Dummy this is taking too long. Move on to something else!”
The Platypus point with this walk down memory lane is that
expensive rates and limited usage meant people used the Internet for a LOT less
commerce or playfully checking things out.
Not only with the Web in its infancy, but because heavy usage would
have bankrupted the average person. Imagine pouring through an online catalog the size of an Amazon.com or BestBuy.com if EACH picture took about 30 seconds to load. For similar reasons, fully-functioning Google
Earth satellite views or Map Quest interactivity would have been unthinkable. (Nudists
communicated even then, though largely through text-based media such as
Rec.nude on Usenet, or RixPlace, a list server some Platypus readers will
remember.)
As Yogi Berra said, “It’s deja’ vu all over again.” This week the FCC Chair went on record in support of measures by local cable companies that charge per data usage to “drive efficiencies.” Many readers already experience data caps and fees on mobile plans. Humorous ads air in which fictional subscribers to such plans must choose between watching footage of their daughter’s school play from the road or downloading an important business app.
The Platypus won’t ponder whether such measures are
justified in this post… only ask what it may mean to spreading the nudist
message. Clothes Free.com distributes Nudes in the News videos. Will people be able to afford to download
em? How about reading the near-constant
Twitter and Facebook feeds some nudists use to get everything from weather
conditions at a nude beach to news about the latest map / navigation app that can help get them there? Will we store nude photos in "cloud based" albums like Flickr if we're paying per gigabyte for uploads and downloads?
It’s kinda like asking, “What would happen to travel to remote and distant
nude beaches if gasoline was unbelievably cheap and plentiful, then suddenly got crimped
into very short supply and skyrocketed in price?” But, we’d have to walk further down memory
lane to the gas crisis of 1974 and we’re already
sounding like a Grandpa Platypus.
Think 'Grandpa Platypus' is a bit of stretch... I remember gas rationing in '74 and I am just reaching my prime, baby! It is interesting to think how our internet habits might be modified today by the constraints we started with (and took for granted) when public access to the web was just taking off... Appreciate your thoughts and your perspective.
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