Forum Moderators: bakedjake
I have been asked by members of the community to say a few words on the passing of Infoseek.
I stand here not to speak for myself, but as a representative of the webmaster community. Just another member of the loyal tens of thousands of website owners for whom Infoseek defined the search engine.
So many of us owe our very careers to Infoseek, that to allow this passing to go unremarked would be an equally tragic loss to net history.
But more than that, Infoseek came to weave it's way into the fabric of our daily net lives.
There was no fee. No 60 day delay, it was just there, it was always on and waiting for you.
Submit a page in the morning, and Infoseek would have it listed by 5pm and sending referrals. From the ever unfolding tragedies around the Globe, to the super bowl champions, Infoseek was there.
We came to trust the Infoseek. To count on it in times of trouble as well as time of joy.
It was a very different net time than today. I'm sure the last holders of the keys to Infoseek, simply can't understand, why so many people would adore a simple search engine with such adoration and respect.
For many in my generation, Infoseek was The Search Engine. It was a rude shock to the senses when we found out that other search engines wouldn't list a page in under 8 hours.
I think of the time during a tragedy long since forgotten in 1997, when I scurried around the net collecting links on the subject. I built a quick set of pages, submitted to Infoseek, and was receiving referrals by afternoon. The visitors who walked through those simple link pages sent me cards of thanks for all the information. I simply replied, "Don't thank me, Thank Infoseek".
I can't help but think there is a big chair waiting for it in search engine heaven.
Infoseek, you will be missed.
Please join with us in sharing your fondest memories of this once titan of an engine.
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Infoseek must have felt it was disgraced, pulled the sacraficial sword from it's sheath and forced it pointedly into the abdomen.
Death by the sword is better than suffering the humiliation of a million tiny deaths it would have suffered as a result of legal briefs with micro fine edges by the creator of all searches and indexes -- Altavista
...the moving finger writes, and having writ, moves on...
Instead, Disney seemed to think the search engine was just a doo-dad or gimmick, a secondary appendage to their pop culture offerings -- and we've all lost.