Do you want "fun" or do you want "the internet as it was in 1997"? Because those are two different things.
If you want "fun", that's largely a product of the people/culture of the people on the internet at the time (High IQ Boomer and Gen X techno-libertarians); and sadly a lot of those people lost their minds (and their sense of humor) in 2016. The minority who didn't migrated to places like this and the chans.
If you want "the internet as it was in 1997", then wayback machine is probably your bet. Make sure you limit your internet connection speed to 28.8 kbps (we didn't really get 56K modems until later, and some ISPs may not have supported 33.6 kbps even though the modems/standards existed).
My first experience with fast internet was in the freshman dorm at college in the early 00s. I needed to download OpenOffice (90MB) and was dreading it, then to my surprise it downloaded in like 30 seconds.
Do you want "fun" or do you want "the internet as it was in 1997"? Because those are two different things.
If you want "fun", that's largely a product of the people/culture of the people on the internet at the time (High IQ Boomer and Gen X techno-libertarians); and sadly a lot of those people lost their minds (and their sense of humor) in 2016. The minority who didn't migrated to places like this and the chans.
If you want "the internet as it was in 1997", then wayback machine is probably your bet. Make sure you limit your internet connection speed to 28.8 kbps (we didn't really get 56K modems until later, and some ISPs may not have supported 33.6 kbps even though the modems/standards existed).
I had ISDN in 1997. IIRC was 128kbps
My first experience with fast internet was in the freshman dorm at college in the early 00s. I needed to download OpenOffice (90MB) and was dreading it, then to my surprise it downloaded in like 30 seconds.
I remember when it took about 2 minutes to download an mp3