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Old Internet Projects That Aged Well

Some web projects survived because they stayed tiny, useful, and human-scaled. They never chased the biggest trend, so they never became unusable.

1. Web archive snapshots

The historical memory of the web still works as a practical research tool.

2. UNIX-style pastebins

Minimal code/text sharing with no feed and no algorithmic clutter.

3. Community wikis

Slow-maintained pages that value clarity over constant novelty.

4. Plain RSS readers

Direct subscription models that avoid timeline manipulation.

5. Public domain libraries

Built for long-term access, not engagement spikes.

6. Text-only search tools

Still fastest when you want information, not visual noise.

7. Personal homepages

One-person sites remain timeless because they are opinionated and finite.

8. Browser-based drawing pads

No install, immediate sketching, still useful in 2026.

9. IRC-inspired chat tools

Room-first communication that keeps social context clear.

10. Link directories

Human-curated lists beat algorithmic feeds for niche discovery.

Durability on the internet often comes from restraint, not scale.