Hello CREATURES of socialmedia!! It's been a while.. I wanted to share with you our newest art pawject!! Our full gallery website, ANIMASYSTEM.ART, is now complete!! We spent many months on this to make it highly interactive and include a variety of works. We hope you will enjoy ^w^
Anyone know like a neocities website template that has multiple pages and like a nav bar with buttons that have like drop down lists? Im talking about the format thats common on a lot of sites, i see it on petsites a lot like.
Something with a main button that says something like 'User' and when you click on it it has sub buttons like 'inventory, pets, shop'
Basically I want a layout that can make it comprehensible to navigate the site if there is a whole lot of pages, I want to make one for my system and let every alter have their own page but that will be over 40 pages so i want to organize by catagories so its easier to nav and the alters people are most likely to talk to are separated out so people who only want to read a few pages know which pages are most useful to read
The capacity of AI to generate content is overwhelming the web.
The web is always dying, of course; it’s been dying for years, killed by apps that divert traffic from websites or algorithms that reward supposedly shortening attention spans. But in 2023, it’s dying again — and, as the litany above suggests, there’s a new catalyst at play: AI.
If the debate about Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter tells us anything, it’s that people — including those in governments — don’t understa
"Each social media platform instead tries to make the entire World Wide Web just one application on one big server. This principle is true for Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and all the other social media applications."
In the late 1980s and 1990s, people created their own websites, manually authoring HTML pages and linking to content other people had published. This was superseded by content management systems and — maybe more importantly — blog software.
Blogs unlocked content publishing for the masses, but it was only when social media platforms emerged – commonly also known as Web 2.0 — that literally everyone with access to the Internet could become a producer of content. And this is when the Web broke, more than 15 years ago. It has been broken ever since.
Social media platforms not only put content beyond the control of those who created it, they also sit as a monolithic interface between a whole generation and the actual Web. Gen Z has never experienced the decentralised nature of the technologies that make the apps they use work.