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Internet rant sparks love letters, “it won’t load”, and a font-size fight

TLDR: A passionate essay torches the modern web’s click-driven grind and inspires some readers to write again, while others complain it won’t load without certain settings and the text is too small. The big debate: nostalgia for the “old web” versus the reality that online culture has fundamentally changed.

A poetic, fire-breathing essay about how the web turned from playground to attention farm dropped—and the comments lit up like a bonfire. On one side, the vibes crowd is swooning. ggillas cried, “Bookmarked,” and said it called them back to reading and writing, even praising the mobile artwork. killa_kyle chimed in with New Year energy: more personal publishing in 2026. It’s giving diary keys and dusty blogs rediscovered.

Then the practical gang showed up with clipboards. pwg slammed the site for failing to render without JavaScript—that’s the code that makes pages interactive—basically saying, “I turned off the magic and the site vanished.” sandeepkd rallied the Font-Size Party, complaining it’s too tiny to skim. Accessibility folks vs art kids? The comments became a hallway where goth poets are arguing with librarians.

Enter the old internet elders: GaryBluto reminisced about pages you could actually read without animations floating all over, then dropped the spicy truth bomb—we’re not getting the old web back because the culture changed. Cue the meme parade: “JS Off gang” vs “Let me vibe,” with jokes about squinting at the font like it’s a Magic Eye poster. Love it or loathe it, this piece made people want to write again—and fight about how we should read now.

Key Points

  • The article claims the internet has shifted from diverse, passion-driven websites to centralized, algorithmic feeds focused on attention capture.
  • It states that learning online now often involves ad-heavy, short-form, multi-part videos, sometimes narrated by AI text-to-speech.
  • It argues that social interaction moved from hand-crafted communities to social media platforms that incentivize clout over intimacy.
  • It contends web development has grown more complex and less meaningful, prioritizing throughput, scale, and shareholder value over craft and security.
  • It acknowledges broader access is beneficial but asserts Big Tech/Web 2.0/web3 altered how the internet feels, using an automobile analogy to discuss diminishing utility and infrastructure demands, especially in American cities.

Hottest takes

"And it fails to render anything with Javascript disabled." — pwg
"Bookmarked. Called me to get back to reading and writing again." — ggillas
"you'll never get the "old web" back" — GaryBluto
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