When I saw the headline I immediately thought of the API, this does a great job explaining its relevance in its time! It’s interesting how even programmers then were trying to learn the concept, but now “API” is common language even nontechnical people generally understand and use in conversation
Is it just "machine tags" or was it also tags on the web in general?<p>I feel Flickr and del.icio.us were the first mass adopters of tags, and everyone else followed, but I'm not sure.
In a recent thread talking about Flickr URLs I mentioned a couple of interesting technical features that Flickr had also done that I thought were worth celebrating.
When gwern mentions that you should write in more detail about those things I feel you have to take that seriously. This is that attempt.
Flickr was the first site I saw where you could edit some text on the screen inline, without a complete page reload to get an “edit” form.<p>Today this is utterly ordinary. At the time, it was remarkable.
Excellent post. Very nostalgic. Interoperability as advantage was a thing people loved back then. But the advent of aggregators showed that you’d rapidly just become a commodity. The community that was Facebook would instead be FriendFeed because that aggregated Facebook and others. And then you had to lock it down or die. Interesting times.