Book of Daze

Book of Daze Reminisce About the Internet Day

A cartoon of a man holding a light bulb.
“Beats the hell out of me.”

There was a time when web pages took thirty seconds to load, the average download took three hours–while you prayed that it didn’t get interrupted–and nobody called themselves a “content creator.” Book of Daze Reminisce About the Internet Day invites you to consider the passing of that buffering era.

Founded on a BBS thread in 2007 and rediscovered in a Reddit comment in 2022, Book of Daze Reminisce About the Internet Day marks the golden age of the web–when people curated Xanga blogs, stole music on LimeWire, and learned HTML just to change their MySpace background to something illegible and seizure-inducing.

“It was ugly, confusing, and deeply personal,” says one early adopter. “Now everything’s branded, monetized, and run by three tech bros with ring lights.”

Participants celebrate Book of Daze Reminisce About the Internet Day by blowing dust off old LiveJournal passwords, quoting Homestar Runner, and photo-shopping themselves into GeoCities graveyards. Bonus points for using Comic Sans unironically. Advanced observers install pop-up blockers, crash their own browsers, or email a friend a chain letter that promises riches or mild hauntings.

Although rarely acknowledged by the mainstream, Book of Daze Reminisce About the Internet Day continues to thrive in basement forums and expired Tumblr URLs. Its official anthem remains “You’ve Got Mail” followed by the sweet modem screech of youth.

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The preceding is satire. Straight up, Skippy. No warranties are expressed or implied. For life advice, try a professional. For investment tips, try a dart board. For salvation, the gentleman in the robe has been handling that portfolio for 2,000 years.