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Every generation will have their own ‘boy, those were the good old days’ moment whenever thinking about what happened 20, 30, 40 or more years ago, depending on how old you are.

For Millennials, the '90s and early aughts is that time period—a time when consumer electronics were not just booming, but innovating like crazy; fashion and style was best described as ‘it’s in that angsty teenager phase’; and pop music was something that you’d now consider a guilty pleasure, for the most part.

People of Reddit were recently reminiscing about the 2000s by sharing things that were used heavily during that time, but are almost never used today. Mostly, it’s electronics, but things like fashion and fads, stores, activities, and memes made the list.

Bored Panda has collected the best answers from the now viral AskReddit question, which gained nearly 60,000 upvotes, and created the curated list below. Go ahead and scroll through it, vote, and let us know what you’d add to the list in the comment section below!

More Info: Reddit

#1

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Calculators; teachers kept saying “you won’t have one with you all the time”, look who’s stupid now, b@#$h?! Both of us…

VICARD0 , Motaz Altahir Report

#2

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Dial-Up.

weeeeeeeee WOOOOOO_OOOOOO_
E E E E E E E EEEEEeeeeee
eee
eee URRRRRRRRR
BEDULUDOLEDULUDOLEEPEEPEEP
R R R R R R R R R R R R R
UMMMMMMMMMMMM

Martini_Man_ , Christiaan Colen Report

#3

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Adreeisadyno said:
Pay phones.

Yes I know pay phones still exist. Also I am now very aware pay phones are free in Australia, thank you for informing me.

resentfulpenguin replied:
In Australia they recently made all payphones free. The cost of collecting the cash was higher than the revenue they were making so they can save money by giving away free calls.

Adreeisadyno , Mike Mozart Report

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Lovin' Life
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I totally agree. Most everyone has a phone but for those who don't and the forgetful ones like me that leave them at home in a rush, you never know when an emergency will come up and you need to make a call such as running out of gas , a break down or an accident.

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Jane Jane
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I recently left my phone at home when going into my office for work. My phone is NECESSARY for the work I do. I to drive 15 miles back to get it. When I go home my husband asked "why didn't you just call me, I would have brought it to you?" Then we both dissolved in laughter.

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Kathryn Baylis
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They actually do still come in handy. Ever have a pocketful of change and leave your cellphone at home? Or go to lunch and leave it on your desk at work? Especially if you also forgot your keys to the house or the office, and someone needs to know you’re going to need to be let in? It happens. I know this because it has happened to me.

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Dave P
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There are still 1800 payphones in public areas and another 3000 in private buildings in NYC (even still 4 phone booths!). 50 cents for a call, and people still use them, especially in lower income areas.

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Nadine Bamberger
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There was a time when you had to use pre paid phone cards in public phone boothes and we used to collect them. I told this riveting story to my niece and nephew and they looked at me like I just told them I regularly used to hunt mammoth for dinner. "But why would you?" "They were colorful and....there." "I'm sorry it was so boring when you were young."

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James016
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I’m pretty sure a number of pay phones in the uk were really profitable for BT as they were used by drug dealers to do business

vanburensupernova44 avatar
Buren
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I remember saving the coins inside a tube of used camera films.

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Eunice Bentley
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We don't even have a payphone at the hospital. Shocks people when I say just pick up the receiver, dial 9 and then the number you need to call.

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Wayne Sharpe
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The British solution to the same issue of it not being worthwhile to collect the cash from pay phones was to make the few remaining pay phones accept only card payments

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HarriMissesScotland
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The last one I saw was on a single track road in the Scottish Highlands.

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Tim Bouchee
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Plus, payphones are how The Machine sends out the irrelevant numbers.

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SAF saf
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The last pay phone i saw was outside of a baseball stadium in San Diego a decade ago.

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MyOpinionHasBeenServed
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They raised the price of payphones in Canada. I think it's .50 cents now. Used to be a quarter. I just got my first cellphone a few years ago. Don't think I'll go back to using payphones again, but sometimes cellphone batteries die or you may lose it. No one really trusts you to borrow theirs. So, I still think payphones are still relevant, today.

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Samantha PandaNotBored
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Really good idea. Especially for children/teens /elderly. Can you imagine Britain doing such a great thing … No me neither

anderlou69 avatar
Uchman
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Wow, that's really good. They're still on UK streets but good luck on finding ones that actually still work. They really don't care about them.

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Thay
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

All the pay phones in my city have disappeared from the homeless and addicts abusing them. They would break them open just for a few coins

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Dirk Daring
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I never use pay phones, because I automatically assume that every one of them has an amount of male DNA on it.

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Brier Random
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Pay phones were a “big deal” in 200?? I don’t think so.

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ZAPanda
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

so fun fact, these were too expensive to scale well in our country given the expansion rate of our cities in the early 2000s. we had them in the 1980s but by the late 1990s they were getting neglected and shifted to cards rather than coins (due to coin devaluation). So you'd preload cash on a phone card. Around the same time, cellphones came out. You now never see these anymore.

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Tara Markey
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

You know I haven't seen a single pay phone in years. But two years ago or so I was stranded and without my cell phone. I was walking and hoping I'd run across one but no. Just one gutted remains of an old pay phone.

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Mike Amira
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I reckon them being free in any country would see a marked popularity in their usage for sure. I'd use them and save on my per min billing

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april jenkins
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

free?? really? we always cary 40¢ wherever we go in case of emergency.

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#4

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Re-writable CDs. I used to burn so many mix CDs after downloading from Napster, BearShare, LimeWire, FrostWire. Then my mother would call, disconnecting the internet and I would have to start the download all over again. Except one file wasn't an mp3, but a virus. I would just reinstall windows before my mom got home as we saved every picture and document on a zip drive... then those fancy jaz drives.

S@#$%inwithmykitten , Javier Aroche Report

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Andy Smith
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Limewire, where you didn’t know if you were downloading the Dookie album or an album of viruses. Good times

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#5

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Indoor smoking. My young-ish kids marvel at the fact that people used to sit in restaurants and smoke.

TurdFergDSF , Henri Bergius Report

#6

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Blue eyeshadow. You could always tell when a junior high school aged girl finally got the okay from her parents to start wearing makeup. She'd show up at school everyday for the next month looking like a blue panda.

blickyjayy , adriana chira Report

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Sean Simpson
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I think blue eyeshadow is fine, but it’s gotta be part of a colour story with high and low lights, just slapping a couple garage doors on your eyelids is not a great look.

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#7

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Murtamatt said:
Phone books.

All_Lines_Merge replied:
I actually used one last week! I needed the home number of a local mechanic - he'd fixed my car but had forgotten to give me my keys, so when I went to get my car after work, I couldn't. The internet only listed the shop number. I called my dad, who's a friend of his, and he said, "just use the phone book!" Like it was the most obvious thing in the world. (I did have a phone book and was able to call him, so it all worked out in the end).

Murtamatt , How can I recycle this Report

#8

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Computer mice with a ball:

My friend had one of the first Microsoft IntelliMouse , which did not use a ball.

As I recall, it was the first laser mouse without a ball that was commercialized in a popular way. It was released in October 1999. So in 2000, most mice were with a ball, and slowly faded away.

fmaz008 , Azriena Azman Report

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Ozacoter
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I loved the texture of the ball, even being already quite old i loved dismantling them to play with it

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#9

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group larrythetarry said:
Blockbuster card.

zippyslug31 replied:
I live a half-hour away from one. Granted, it's the last one, but still...

pegleg_1979 replied:
It’s surreal walking around that store. Closest thing to time traveling I’ll ever get to do.

larrythetarry , Jonathan Rolande Report

#10

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group ParoxysmAttack said:
If you had a big screen TV, it was probably a ridiculously thick rear projection TV.

CristyTango replied:
My parents can’t get it out of the house.

ParoxysmAttack , badjonni Report

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Jane Jane
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My generation was the first to purchase microwaves ($800), camcorders ($1,200), VCR's ($500) and big screen tv's that weighed a ton ($God Only Knows). To the generations that followed... you're welcome.

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#11

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group No-Sheepherder-2896 said:
The term “World Wide Web”.

Bilbo_nubbins replied:
“Visit us at h t t p colon slash slash w w w dot p b s dot o r g”

RixirF replied:
I can still hear them thank viewers like me.

No-Sheepherder-2896 , Chris RubberDragon Report

#12

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group BigBump said:
Spinning under construction gifs on websites.

starkiller_bass replied:
Remember when most websites had a hit counter on them?

Syscrush replied:
And the email address of the webmaster?

darkcatwizard replied:
And a guest book 😂

PawnedPawn replied:
And crappy mouse cursor-following animations that killed your processor speed but at least looked pretty...

BigBump , NicePNG Report

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#13

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group hellobyethanks said:
PDAs Personal Digital Assistants

Blacktung replied:
Whenever I write something down on my hand I always say out loud "I'll put that in my palm pilot".

I get a sad chuckle every time.

hellobyethanks , Blake Patterson Report

#14

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group brokenturle said:
Zip Disks.

zoobs replied:
Remember Jaz disks? I was so blown away by a 1gb disk!

tratemusic replied:
This week i got a micro SD card for my switch. 64 gigs, in a micro card, for less than 20 bucks. I really marvel at the advancements in our storage technology just within my lifetime.

omguserius replied:
I still remember back in the day, my father looking at a computer game box and yelling, “TEN megabytes? Who the [heck] needs 10 megabytes for a video game!?!”

brokenturle , Douglas Muth Report

#15

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Murtamatt said:
VCRs.

xtracto replied:
Tape rewinders!!
BE KIND, REWIND!
I liked the ones that had the form of a sports car.

atxbikenbus replied:
I worked at a blockbuster. We had rows and rows of rewinders. People...were not kind.

Belazriel replied:
I remember an eventual switch to "Don't rewind" because the VCRs people had at home were rougher on the tapes than a standalone tape rewinder.

Murtamatt , Brad Montgomery Report

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#16

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Any sort of dedicated music-playing device, before that just became a part of your phone.

Confusionator5000 , https://flic.kr/p/totMDM Report

#17

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Ocean927 said:
Maps or Mapquest.

deadlymoogle replied:
My wife calls Google maps MapQuest if we need directions she'll tell me to MapQuest it on my phone.

nfssmith replied:
My wife still used Mapquest until maybe 2 years ago when I asked her if she was looking for directions back to 1998.

Ocean927 , MapQuest Report

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DuchessDegu
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I know someone who still prints maps, there's about 100 pages of random maps in their car "just in case there's no signal". I told them you can download the map and use it offline. Nope, have to waste paper and ink by printing the freaking directions to Tesco or whatever. Infuriating.

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#18

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Download Managers.

Start the download right after Mom goes to bed, wake up before her to pause the download and disconnect the dial-up connection, resume tomorrow night. Repeat...

A week later, you're playing Counter-Strike. 😎

Laserwulf , lloydsscreenies Report

#19

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group DamnedMonkey said:
ICQ.

Squallypie replied:
Couple of years ago, I had a number come into my head. Recognized it but didn’t know where from. For over a year it kept bugging me. Was it my college enrolment/password? Number for someone I worked with when I worked overseas? Not a clue for the longest time.

Random convo with a friend about old memes and things we miss about the early internet days, and I just blurted out “its my [friggin] ICQ number!” with no context…

DamnedMonkey , TechSpot Report

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#20

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group skaote said:
Pagers.

AleksandrNevsky replied:
People still think my insulin pump is a pager sometimes.

CouncilmanRickPrime replied:
Doctors still use them.

skaote , Hades2k Report

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Tad Denton
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We have a dedicated local pager system tied to call system at an Assisted Living Center. A Resident pulls their cord and immediately a page goes out with the room # to the Caregiver who caries it during their shift. Haven't found a more efficient replacement

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#21

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Sending greeting cards online, e-greeting cards.

MidisG82 Report

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NsG
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I still do this. My aunt and uncle moved house at the same time as us, and in the move, I lost the piece of paper with their new address. So when his birthday rolled round two months later, I sent an e-card. And it's become a silly little tradition ever since.

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#22

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group TheKillersHand said:
The phase "W'zzzzzuppppp".

MattHack7 replied:
WAAAZZZZZUUUUUUUUUUUPPPP?!?!?!?!?

TheKillersHand , Dimension Films Report

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Hazel Joseph
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I may or may not have read this (in my head) in a Milhouse voice (not Mulhouse lol)

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#23

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group AdamoclesYT said:
Colored spikey hair gel.

ShowMeYourTorts replied:
Bro, I am still waiting for the day frosted tips make a comeback.

thricetheory replied:
Honestly man the kids these days look straight outta the 90's, though most of them seem to think it's original. Wouldn't surprise me if frosted tips are next.

AdamoclesYT , eBay Report

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Andy Smith
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had frosted tips, puka shell necklaces, the big fossil watch. I looked hot. Now 20+ yrs later I’m a balding gray haired dude with a dad bod and live in crocs and sweats

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#24

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group thelaughingman2 said:
Landlines.

portablebiscuit replied:
Also 1-800-COLLECT and 1-800-CALLATT.
Dial down the middle!

Triumph3 replied:
Bob Wehadababyitsaboy

nobody2000 replied:
I needed to use payphones before this commercial and this was something we'd all do.

"Please state your name after the tone" MOMPICKMEUPATSCHOOL

"You have a collect call from MOMPICKMEUPATSCHOOL"

The best part was when she'd say "no" to the charges, and I secretly wondered if anyone was going to actually pick me up, or if they thought that the bus would take me (Jazz band practice ended after the late bus departed).

thelaughingman2 , https://flic.kr/p/akuRmv Report

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F. H.
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We still use it too. It's cheaper and included in our internet contract.

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#25

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group I’m having to scroll really far without seeing this… but TIVO.

If you had one of those it was like cable television, satellite tv, and your VCR recorder had an AI baby. There was so much power in consumers hands for the first time in the television business.

Did your company pay for a catchy jingle, professional actors, camera equipment, writers and pay extra to roll it on a prime time slot?…. Doesn’t matter anymore suckers I had a TIVO. And all it took was that little familiar “bah-DOOK” from my remote to %100 skip commercials.

More than that, competitions for national tv ratings were skewed. I could watch House while Bones recorded on another Chanel at the same time.

With a TiVo I could keep a massive library of cable reruns OF MY CHOICE. That thing was short lived as actual streaming shook up the industry more and phased TiVo out, but TiVo had a solid 10 years of being the shiz.

Twheelhouse , Miles Goodhew Report

#26

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group spiraldinosaur said:
Askjeeves/Lycos/Yahoo.

TrinixDMorrison replied:
I remember my grandma was convinced that you had to word your searches in the form of a question for AskJeeves to work properly.

ElixirofVitriol replied:
TBF this is the way I was taught to use AskJeeves in elementary school.

92894952620273749383 replied:
Proper phrasing gives the algorithim the proper context. Google said [screw] it lets do page rank.

spiraldinosaur , AskJeeves Report

#27

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group NewsProducing said:
PlayStation 2
It was the hottest thing in 2000.

FishSauceFogMachine replied:
Ah yes, the year my parents told everyone I was into "games" because I'd asked for a PS2, and I got three copies of Monopoly for Christmas.

Worst Christmas ever.

NewsProducing , Deni Williams Report

#28

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group Academic-Motor said:
Winamp.

Transmatrix replied:
It really whips the llama’s ass.

Academic-Motor , Christiaan Colen Report

#29

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group papaweir said:
Geocities, NeoPets, LiveJournal, and Kazaa.

goblinsexologist replied:
Neopets don’t die though, I logged in after a long time and my neopet was starving, so I fed it a piece of the omelette and he said “yuck I don’t like omelettes” so I logged off and let the sassy little bat starve for another 10 years.

j-u-n-i replied:
Geocities was so powerful for the time. I used to build my website there, steal the html and use it for my own domain. This was pre-social media. If you wanted to share your weird goth poetry and fuzzy webcam selfies, you had to have your own website. Using the steeling html method for years eventually taught me how to write it.

papaweir , unknown Report

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#30

30 Things That Used To Be A Big Deal Back In 2000, But Have Faded Out, As Shared By Folks In This Online Group PacMan8122 said:
AOL.

BicyclingBabe replied:
Not to my parents! They both still use [it] for their internet email and browser.

PacMan8122 , Karl Baron Report