Posted on 06/09/2006 2:55:56 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat
The link at the TOP of the page works...the individual links do NOT. sorry. rd.
Later read...
What about 8-track?
LOL I have 4 items on that list, and if I had had more buck$ to spend over the years I probably would have had twice that number.
I actually thought they were superior to cassetes in some ways.
PDF files should be #1
No matter how fast your connection they still take forever to load and there's always a 50-50 chance they will crash your system.
Even opening a saved one on your computer takes forever as Adobe has to open each individual *.dll & *.ini file one by one.
They are mind bending slow to navigate also.
Timex-Sinclair ZX-81?
I think I have CueCat in a drawer somewhere. No, I was not stupid enough to use it!
AOL does suck. But what is the problem with RealPlayer? I use it and am pretty satisfied with it.
Yep, PDF should definitely be at #1.
I don't dispute that these products are terrible, but the earliest one is 1989? I don't believe that. There has to be terrible tech products from the '60s and '70s that are worthy for the list.
- America Online (1989-2006)
- RealNetworks RealPlayer (1999)
- Syncronys SoftRAM (1995)
- Microsoft Windows Millennium (2000)
- Sony BMG Music CDs (2005)
- Disney The Lion King CD-ROM (1994)
- Microsoft Bob (1995)
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 (2001)
- Pressplay and Musicnet (2002)
- dBASE IV (1988)
- Priceline Groceries and Gas (2000)
- PointCast (1996)
- IBM PCjr. (1984)
- Gateway 2000 10th Anniversary PC (1995)
- Iomega Zip Drive (1998)
- Comet Cursor (1997)
- Apple Macintosh Portable (1989)
- IBM Deskstar 75GXP (2000)
- OQO Model 1 (2004)
- CueCat (2000)
- Eyetop Wearable DVD Player (2004)
- Apple Pippin @World (1996)
- Free PCs (1999)
- DigiScents iSmell (2001)
- Sharp RD3D Notebook (2004)
They forgot about the Circuit City/Divx debacle.
AOL served a purpose until about 2000, though, as diaper training for people getting on the internet. Now, I have no idea why anyone would keep an account there.
I liked Pointcast ... but unfortunately the minute it became popular, people started using it at work and blew up their company's bandwidth, and that was all she wrote.
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