What's wrong with exploring oneself? Obviously not too much nor wrongly in public and never to excess, but if the modern spelunking is just urbex - which it is, in my view, and much more appealing than any dank smelly old cave - then, though I won't repeat the hideous portmanteau, I don't suppose I see too much of a problem with this practice, either.
After all - γνῶθι σεαυτόν, wasn't that the phrase? No accident at all we find it incised over the gateway to an oracle. You might want to think about that, who has just finished reading this now.
I ran into one of these neo-geocities-style websites in the wild when telling my friend about a trendy pizza place I liked. Even the EN-FR switch is animated:
Pretty cool. Nice to see iframes, don't think I've seen those in a long long time. Also very good that the forum has a post your desk thread[1], very 2005 internet of them. One thing I can't figure out, are these old people who lived old internet or young people who have recreated old internet for themselves to live? Either way, cool site.
I played the "guess what it's going to be about before clicking on it" game with this item, and lost badly. I won't spoil the fun, but only remark that this site is neither about [1] a melon farming business, nor [2] a certain famous man with autocratic tendencies whose handle in "last-initial first" format would be "melon".
This is a perfect example of the "neocities" movement - a modern revival of the 90s/early 2000s web aesthetic that explicitly rejects the homogenized, corporate design patterns that dominate today's internet.
I feel a bit warm and fuzzy inside when the forum (and the guestbook) seem reasonably active even if they're hidden under a rock. It's a treehouse kind of vibe.
The reality is this is on the HN front page probably because it was trending on Reddit/Twitter or whatever the kids use these days. Without the grace of the benevolent algorithms, you would never ever have found out about this website.
No thank you! I've never melonked in my life and I surely don't mean to start now.
I thought it was about something like spelunking but you just explore yourself. Basically just the 21st century.
What's wrong with exploring oneself? Obviously not too much nor wrongly in public and never to excess, but if the modern spelunking is just urbex - which it is, in my view, and much more appealing than any dank smelly old cave - then, though I won't repeat the hideous portmanteau, I don't suppose I see too much of a problem with this practice, either.
After all - γνῶθι σεαυτόν, wasn't that the phrase? No accident at all we find it incised over the gateway to an oracle. You might want to think about that, who has just finished reading this now.
Mellon is Sindarin for "friend", so maybe mellonking is exploring one's friends?
I ran into one of these neo-geocities-style websites in the wild when telling my friend about a trendy pizza place I liked. Even the EN-FR switch is animated:
https://pizzabouquet.ca/
Much, much better than most websites today, IMO.
It's fast here. That's a win over 99% of modern sites.
Pretty cool. Nice to see iframes, don't think I've seen those in a long long time. Also very good that the forum has a post your desk thread[1], very 2005 internet of them. One thing I can't figure out, are these old people who lived old internet or young people who have recreated old internet for themselves to live? Either way, cool site.
[1]https://forum.melonland.net/index.php?PHPSESSID=641b114d1686...
A website that closes on Mondays? Stupid, stupid concept. As stupid as Steam's Tuesday Maintenance...
Fortunately, you can skip it very easily: https://melonking.net/melon
I played the "guess what it's going to be about before clicking on it" game with this item, and lost badly. I won't spoil the fun, but only remark that this site is neither about [1] a melon farming business, nor [2] a certain famous man with autocratic tendencies whose handle in "last-initial first" format would be "melon".
I thought it was likely to be like the onion sales story.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19728132
Yeah, it's not about Melon Usk.
Oh I guess it is supposed to be Melon-King, but I firmly read it as Melonk-ing at first. What could it mean to melonk?
Ascribe a meaning to it, make it a viral meme, and the meaning will stick.
Words like "quiz" and "blog" came to existence this way.
No infinite scrolling, no AJAX and the back button works.
The entire world wide web used to be just like that, back in the Good Old Days of teh Internets, or so I'm told.
This is a perfect example of the "neocities" movement - a modern revival of the 90s/early 2000s web aesthetic that explicitly rejects the homogenized, corporate design patterns that dominate today's internet.
“There used to be an end to the page!”
I feel a bit warm and fuzzy inside when the forum (and the guestbook) seem reasonably active even if they're hidden under a rock. It's a treehouse kind of vibe.
This is the World Wide Web?
This is what the World Wide Web is supposed to be.
The reality is this is on the HN front page probably because it was trending on Reddit/Twitter or whatever the kids use these days. Without the grace of the benevolent algorithms, you would never ever have found out about this website.
The reality is that I was browsing the annual HTML Day submissions [1] and stumbled upon this super wholesome webpage.
[1] https://html.energy/html-day/2025/index.html
Wonderful site. How are they sneaking in the auto-playing music? Firefox even displays a little icon saying audio is being blocked.
Firefox on Android blocked it. They gave me a nice message:
>Oh no! You have autoplay Music disabled! Please enable it to enjoy this site fully
The link rings are at the bottom of the Fav Hyperlinks page, in case anyone was looking.
>You can read a profile about me on Rhizome :o What a wild outcome for what started as a weekend homepage project ~ https://rhizome.org/editorial/2025/jul/29/artist-profile-dan...
> Works best in Firefox!
The Internet is cool again.
My fave website of this ilk is superbad.com. I go back here and there and I'm instantly 17 again, hee-heeing at the postmodernity of it all
Pure genius!
It definitely will heat up your cpu.
Came for the linkbait, stayed for the midi renditions of popular hits gone (g)old. Say it ain't so.