> I'm personally convinced that webrings are one of those ideas that died for good reason.
Except that nothing came up that replaced them.
> if you want a big list of links to follow, just start a Wiki.
What wasn't the purpose of webrings, though.
I have no special love for webrings as a mechanism. I do have a love for what they did socially, though. If something else came along that served the same purpose, that would be awesome -- but so far, nothing has. I think that the main reason for that is that the web itself has changed from a place for people to a place for commerce.
Social bonds are formed by humans, not technology. In effect, the technology used is almost a side-effect. You can build social bonds through emails, letters, walking and talking with people.
Today, kids are using Google Documents to communicate with each other in classrooms (ie: sharing links, collaborating on homework, etc. etc.), They don't need Webrings to share a set of links that happen to be on the same subject. In fact, you don't need any real tech at all, it could all just be a bulletin board, it could be a phone number that you leave somewhere with a computer hooked up that everyone connects with a 300 baud modem to. Etc. etc.
Or ya know, a Tweet, a Reddit post, a Facebook message. A google group. Etc. etc.
Except that nothing came up that replaced them.
> if you want a big list of links to follow, just start a Wiki.
What wasn't the purpose of webrings, though.
I have no special love for webrings as a mechanism. I do have a love for what they did socially, though. If something else came along that served the same purpose, that would be awesome -- but so far, nothing has. I think that the main reason for that is that the web itself has changed from a place for people to a place for commerce.