> A broad optimism about technology and communication using technology
A big part of this in my mind was the novelty of it. It was actually a whole new capability for people.
In 1977 if you loved Star Wars maybe you could talk to your friends about it. If you didn't know anyone that felt the same about it you were kind of stuck. If you were lucky you might have a sci-fi convention nearby you could attend. Magazines might give you some interesting details but it wasn't a conversation.
This was the same in 1987 for most people. Unless you had a 1) computer 2) modem 3) BBS client 4) a local BBS that was affordable to call that let you talk Star Wars 5) the knowledge to do all that you were stuck with few options to talk Star Wars.
By 1997 the average Star Wars lover had a lot more good options for talking Star Wars. You no longer had to hope a local BBS had good Star Wars options. The Internet gave everybody on it global reach. Your homepage could declare your love/hate of all things Star Wars. You could get e-mail or guestbook responses to stuff you wrote.
If you were just getting into Star Wars in 2007 there had been at least a decade of existing discussion and web pages about Star Wars. It was just assumed people on the Internet were talking about Star Wars and you could jump into any of those discussions. The same was true in 2017.
The 1997 time frame was really the first time that idea was true. It was enpowering to just be able to write stuff about a subject and publish it in a globally accessible way. Normal people never really had that ability before. It was also very much "on the Internet no one knows you're a dog". A 15 year old's fan page about something existed alongside a 30 year old professional writer's fan page.
Sure-- I agree with all that. And I mean, I've benefitted from the new thing: being parts of groups of 50 people assembled worldwide hacking on one thing because it's interesting or whatever where you'd never have a critical mass on a local board.
But there was something about having consistent groups of friends online. It stayed around on the internet for awhile after mass adoption, but really started to dry up around 2002, and then the rise of social media hastened the demise.
A big part of this in my mind was the novelty of it. It was actually a whole new capability for people.
In 1977 if you loved Star Wars maybe you could talk to your friends about it. If you didn't know anyone that felt the same about it you were kind of stuck. If you were lucky you might have a sci-fi convention nearby you could attend. Magazines might give you some interesting details but it wasn't a conversation.
This was the same in 1987 for most people. Unless you had a 1) computer 2) modem 3) BBS client 4) a local BBS that was affordable to call that let you talk Star Wars 5) the knowledge to do all that you were stuck with few options to talk Star Wars.
By 1997 the average Star Wars lover had a lot more good options for talking Star Wars. You no longer had to hope a local BBS had good Star Wars options. The Internet gave everybody on it global reach. Your homepage could declare your love/hate of all things Star Wars. You could get e-mail or guestbook responses to stuff you wrote.
If you were just getting into Star Wars in 2007 there had been at least a decade of existing discussion and web pages about Star Wars. It was just assumed people on the Internet were talking about Star Wars and you could jump into any of those discussions. The same was true in 2017.
The 1997 time frame was really the first time that idea was true. It was enpowering to just be able to write stuff about a subject and publish it in a globally accessible way. Normal people never really had that ability before. It was also very much "on the Internet no one knows you're a dog". A 15 year old's fan page about something existed alongside a 30 year old professional writer's fan page.