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Cyberia and other olde-worlde internet cafe memories

Cloo

Banana for scale
This article brought back some memories: Remembering Cyberia, the World's First Ever Cyber Cafe

I visited it a few times when in town and in the mid 90s felt awfully cool. We were actually online at home pretty early by national standards, but obviously without portable internet you had to go there if you were out all day and wanted to do something online. Not quite sure what I did while I was there; I think I might have done some work on a very basic and bad and never launched site intended as guide to young alternative London by young alternative Londoners my friend and I had a vague idea about.

I guess cyber cafes were useful for killing some time in town mostly and maybe I did some pragmatic stuff to do with applying for uni at them too.
 
I remember what might have been Bristol's first - ‘Dorothy's’ (as in ‘friend of’) in Old Market. The owner kind of went through wobbles about its identity, so when it first opened it was internet access and coffees and maybe cake; then he tried to make it a greasy spoon vibe; then a night time bistro vibe; then ‘Scottish cuisine’ (i.e. rollmops and, ah, well pretty much mainly rollmops).

None of the staff (who were mostly friends or people who worked in his saunas) were very techy (and nor was he really), and I seem to recall some random local guy hanging around to offer IT support when punters had a problem. Unless I am mistaken he later appeared on the front page of the Evening Post after some suspected burglar was chased by police across rooftops in Redland or St Andrews or somewhere like that until gravity decided it preferred him more at pavement level. The next time I saw him he was fulfilling a similar role, but performed from a wheelchair, at ‘EasyCaf’ on Stokes Croft, which was a better place altogether (though Stelios didn't think so).

Oh, and there was another one on Broad Street in St. Nick's, but I don't really remember much except a then-girlfriend took me in there to create my first email address.
 
I remember the era quite well. I had just discovered the world of the internet around the turn of the millennium, and was fascinated, but as I worked seven nights on, seven off, I deliberately didn't have internet access at home, so that I could live in the Real World. Few people did much on the internet back then anyway. If I had to do something on my week off, I went to an internet café, at least until libraries began to offer access.
 
Anyone remember IT boxes? Like a booth you could send email from do some basic web browsing. There was one outside the local Asda back circuit 2002. At that point I was using dial up from my Windows 95 laptop. It seemed well cyberpunk though. This Internet connected thin in the street.
 
I remember what might have been Bristol's first - ‘Dorothy's’ (as in ‘friend of’) in Old Market. The owner kind of went through wobbles about its identity, so when it first opened it was internet access and coffees and maybe cake; then he tried to make it a greasy spoon vibe; then a night time bistro vibe; then ‘Scottish cuisine’ (i.e. rollmops and, ah, well pretty much mainly rollmops).

None of the staff (who were mostly friends or people who worked in his saunas) were very techy (and nor was he really), and I seem to recall some random local guy hanging around to offer IT support when punters had a problem. Unless I am mistaken he later appeared on the front page of the Evening Post after some suspected burglar was chased by police across rooftops in Redland or St Andrews or somewhere like that until gravity decided it preferred him more at pavement level. The next time I saw him he was fulfilling a similar role, but performed from a wheelchair, at ‘EasyCaf’ on Stokes Croft, which was a better place altogether (though Stelios didn't think so).

Oh, and there was another one on Broad Street in St. Nick's, but I don't really remember much except a then-girlfriend took me in there to create my first email address.

There was an Internet café on East Street in Bedminster I remember. Never went in there. Do you remember these IT boxes? They probably got vandalised.
 
I had heard, vaguely, of rollmops, but have only just looked up what they are.

No thank you, please.

I only went to internet cafes a couple of times. Not enough to properly remember what sort of thing for.
 
Amazingly I only ever saw a guy blatantly looking at porn once over the few years I went to cyber cafes
 
I remember visiting Cyberia once or twice, and also slightly later the bright orange EasyInternetCafes that were in really central locations such as Trafalgar Square and Tottenham Court Road. When I first visited New York in 2005, I was surprised to find a big EasyInternetCafe just off Times Square, I think.

Faintly depressing memories of the internet cafe scene for the most part really. I wasn't part of the rave culture that allegedly surrounded Cyberia - though Cyberia looked very tame when I visited. And they just seemed like soulless places in which to waste some time, and not even with good coffee.
 
Used to nip over the road to use the printers (in the imaginatively named Cybercafe) as mine were continually crapping out.
 
That article has evoked a strong sense of nostalgia, having visited Cyberia from time to time as a stop-off point whilst record buying in Soho. Radio 1 broadcasting their 'Interactive night' from there, with Orbital playing via ISDN :cool: This is what the future looks like!

That said, my first encounters on the internet was through staying at an uncles (Compuserve, Netscape, and discovering newsgroups like alt.rave) and then off to uni where I spent a lot of time surfing. I'm sure I must have landed on the Urban site at least once in the late 90s although I don't recall for sure. I certainly didn't check the forum until much later and even then I didnt join up for some years again (although that itself is now 15 years ago :eek:). Pleased I've experienced some good years here and met great people, even if I do regret not doing so earlier during what seems like 'the golden years' (and missing out on Unsound, etc.).

The feeling I once had that the internet/web offered world-shrinking and revolutionary egalitarian and levelling possibilities seemed to have mostly passed by the mid 00s. Didnt take long really for it all to be subsumed into corporatism and capitalism. Certainly was mindblowing in those earlier days communicating with people around the world about music, politics, LGBT stuff, etc. Trading tapes (and later mp3s) of rave and radio tapes with someone over in the States! Rave music/artist sites such as Hyperreal and anyone being able to have a little home on Geocities. And chatting on ICQ! :D Bit later still radio stations live streaming.

The internet has and continues to radically change the world, how we live, work, and interact - in many ways for good, and increasingly for the bad. I mourn the one-time naive exhuberance of it all though and the 'cyber cafe' era reflected that. Traditional forums like this rather than big-business owned 'social media'. Been reading 'Digital Disconnect: How Capitalism is Turning the Internet against Democracy' recently that discusses a lot of how I view where we find ourselves these days.
 
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Amazingly I only ever saw a guy blatantly looking at porn once over the few years I went to cyber cafes


My first time on the internet, in 1999, was in a an international cafe in Saudi Arabia about a week after the regime legalised it. I resisted the strong urge to search for anything that violated the censorship laws.

The only time I noticed people looking at porn was in Hounslow Library by a three young Somali women, which seemed slightly incongruous. They weren't taking it terribly seriously.
 
Don't remember ever seeing one. An internet cafe that is, not a rollmop.
There were three I used to use in Manchester City Centre.
Cyberia on Oxford Rd, EasyInternetCafe in St Anne's Square and some other cafe I can't recall the name of (that is now a Starbucks) on the end of Tib St/Market St/Piccadilly Gardens. Mid to late 90's, Maybe 2000 at the latest.
I know Cyberia was still there in 2000.
 
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