The year 1999 was the grand finale of the 20th century and the absolute peak of „Dot-Com Fever.” While the world held its breath over the Y2K bug and watched The Matrix, the internet was undergoing a radical transformation—moving from a place to read text to a playground for sharing media and expressing individual identity.
Top 10 1999 Iconic Internet Milestones
- The Launch of Napster: Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker release Napster, a peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing service. It turns the music industry upside down overnight, popularizing the MP3 format and starting the global debate over digital piracy.
- The Birth of Blogger: Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan (Pyra Labs) launch Blogger. It makes publishing online so easy that anyone can have a voice, triggering the first true „golden age” of the blogosphere.
- The BlackBerry 850: Research In Motion (RIM) releases the first BlackBerry device. Featuring a tiny QWERTY keyboard and „always-on” email, it becomes the ultimate status symbol for professionals and the precursor to the modern smartphone.
- The Launch of MSN Messenger: Microsoft enters the instant messaging wars with MSN Messenger, directly challenging AOL’s dominance and introducing „emoticons” to millions of workspaces and bedrooms.
- The „Matrix” Viral Marketing: The website whatisthematrix.com becomes a pioneer in digital marketing, using mysterious puzzles and hidden clues to build hype for the film, proving the internet is the ultimate tool for „word-of-mouth” hype.
- Alibaba is Founded: Jack Ma and a team of 17 others found Alibaba in Hangzhou, China. It starts as a B2B marketplace, setting the stage for China’s future dominance in global e-commerce.
- The Launch of LiveJournal: Brad Fitzpatrick creates LiveJournal to keep his high school friends updated. It evolves into a massive social networking platform, blending blogging with „friends lists” and community groups.
- The Wi-Fi (802.11b) Boom: Apple releases the iBook with „AirPort” wireless networking. It is the first consumer product to make Wi-Fi truly accessible and „cool,” finally cutting the cord for home internet users.
- The Birth of RSS: Dan Libby and Ramanathan V. Guha at Netscape develop RSS (RDF Site Summary). This allows users to „subscribe” to website updates, creating the foundation for news aggregators and future podcasts.
- TiVo and the End of Appointment TV: TiVo launches its first digital video recorder. By allowing users to pause live TV and skip commercials, it brings „internet-style” control and on-demand logic to the traditional living room.
Additional Tech & Cultural Observations
- The Melissa Virus: One of the first „macro viruses” spreads via email, overloading servers globally and forcing the public to take „cybersecurity” and antivirus software seriously.
- The Launch of SETI@home: This project allows millions of internet users to donate their „idle” computer power to help search for extraterrestrial life, showcasing the power of distributed computing.
- Y2K Hysteria Reaches its Peak: Billions of dollars are spent globally on software updates to prevent a digital apocalypse at midnight on December 31st.
- The Victoria’s Secret Webcast: A highly publicized fashion show is streamed online; it is so popular that it crashes the servers, proving that the web isn’t quite ready for „mass-broadcast” video yet.
- The Birth of Emojis (Japan): Shigetaka Kurita creates the first set of 176 emojis for the Japanese mobile system i-mode, laying the visual alphabet for future global communication.
- Internet Explorer 5.0 Release: Microsoft’s browser achieves over 50% market share, introducing „favicons” and significantly improving how web pages handle complex layouts.
- The Launch of Britannica.com: The legendary encyclopedia goes online for free, and the site immediately crashes due to overwhelming traffic, signaling the end of the printed encyclopedia era.
- The „Pets.com” Puppet: The sock puppet mascot for Pets.com becomes the face of the dot-com bubble—massive marketing spend without a clear path to profit.
- 1999 The Year of the Content Creator: This year proved the internet belonged to the users. Between Napster and Blogger, 1999 was the moment we stopped being „consumers” and started being „participants” in the digital world.
🔥 Top 10: Technology
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1998 Report: The Launch of PayPal
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🔥 More from our 1999 archives:
1999 Vault: Alibaba is Founded
Jack Ma and a team of 17 others found Alibaba in Hangzhou, China. It starts as a B2B marketplace, setting...read more »
1999 Legacy: The Launch of MSN Messenger
Microsoft enters the instant messaging wars with MSN Messenger, directly challenging AOL's dominance and introducing "emoticons" to millions of workspaces...read more »
1999 Vault: The Launch of SETI@home
This project allows millions of internet users to donate their "idle" computer power to help search for extraterrestrial life, showcasing...read more »
1999 Legacy: The "Pets.com" Puppet
The sock puppet mascot for Pets.com becomes the face of the dot-com bubble—massive marketing spend without a clear path to...read more »