Notes
Farewell GeoCities
To many ‘homesteaders’, GeoCities feels like it has been around since the dawn of the web; in fact it was established in late 1994 by Messrs David Bohnett and John Rezner.
An institution, in every sense of the word, GeoCities established a novel model for mapping the real world of everyday life onto the virtual world of the web. According to Wikipedia:
In its original form, users selected a ‘city’ in which to place their web pages. These ‘cities’ were named after real cities or regions according to their content – for example, computer-related sites were placed in ‘SiliconValley’ and those dealing with entertainment were assigned to ‘Hollywood’ – hence the name ‘GeoCities’.
Acquired by Yahoo! a decade ago, GeoCities today, sadly, closed its doors. We’re sad to see it go.

![GeoCities is closing on October 26, 2009. [Detail]](/assets/farewell_geocities.png)
Jessica Hische is an illustrator, typographer and designer living in Brooklyn, New York. We asked Ms Hische a dozen questions…
Whilst it's encouraging to see Apple throwing its considerable weight behind HTML5 and the development of open web standards, it's unveiling late last week of an HTML5 Showcase was, to put it mildly, somewhat disingenuous…
Simon Collison is a designer, speaker, author and bon viveur with a passion for Victoriana and assorted miscellany. We asked Mr Collison a dozen questions…