Video of a little girl and her dog singing nursery rhymes

Video of a little girl and her dog singing nursery rhymes #Video #girl #dog #singing #nursery #rhymes Welcome to RKM Blog, here is the new story we have for you today:
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1. Downloading custom cursor effects for your computer
Ah yes, who wants to see a boring arrow move around their screen when they can pretend to wave fairy dust around? Or rainbows, or snowflakes, or bubbles, for that matter. There really was something magically cathartic about animated cursors. Sure they were riddled with bugs, but sometimes thatâs the price you pay for a little whimsy, right?
âI gave my family computer so many viruses back in the ’00s trying to click things with a lightsaber.â â@TW1103
2. Pre-Google search engines
One engine to search them all….
Wow, hard to imagine a time when googling wasnât an actual word. Believe it or not, kids, it used to be anything goes when looking up obscure movie trivia or long lost recipes.
Each search engine site had its own personalityâAlta Vista chose a no frills approach, Dogpile offered a (never funny) joke of the day, and Ask Jeeves featured a savvy valet based on a character in a novel series by P.G. Wodehouse, ready to quench all curiosities that came in the form of a question.
Many of these separate quirks were quite revolutionary and, though eventually swallowed up by Googleâs widespread success, have clearly inspired much of its overall format. Sure, other search engines do still exist, but I think we can all agree that Google reigns supreme.
3. AOL Instant Messenger (AIM)
Huluâs âPEN15,â which centers around two middle schoolers in the early 2000s, nailed everything about AOL chat rooms with accuracyâfrom the cringeworthy screen names, to the melodramatic away messages, to the obnoxious login sound that had a Pavlovian effect on teens, bringing their eyes involuntarily to the screen. Itâs pure gold.
Of course, there are some aspects of AIM that might be best forgottenâprimarily the dangerous way in which teenagers were easily exploited.
âI was 14 but playing a 17 year old because 17 was very âgrown upâ to me, but I didnât feel it was enough of an age gap for the lie to be exposed.â â@KayleighJK
“I was 13 pretending I was 18 on AOL chat rooms. I was exposed to too much at a young age. Imagine if I said my actual age” â@Chickeneggsandlegs
4. Flash games
Got Flash?
Flash gamesâoften free, super easy to play, and normally only required Adobe Flash. According to Comic Book Resources (CBR), one flash game in particular called âClub Penguinâ was so well loved that when it shut down in 2017, âthousands of players logged on for the game’s final moments, doing everything they could do in game before it was gone forever.â
5. Smart Guestbooks
This was a nice one, for sure.
Pretty straightforward, and a pretty sweet way to connect with people around the world. Visitors from all over could digitally âsignâ and leave a personal message, usually things like âHi Iâm so-and-so and I really enjoyed your website, was a pleasure to browse.â See now nice that was? Not exactly like the aggressive Yelp reviews weâve become accustomed to.
6. GeoCities
So few pixels, so little time.
Into science fiction and fantasy? Head on over to âArea51.â More of a sports fan? Click on âColosseum.â Geocities offered virtual neighborhoods based on specific interests, all on sites filled with flashy graphics and some hot new thing called GIFs. This was a time when enthusiasm for the internet as a community-building and self-expression space was at an all time high, even if looking back the execution was a tad rudimentary.
Though the days of Geocities are gone, some remnants of its glory remain, like this.
7. Webrings
In the B.A. (Before Algorithm) era.
As MIC contributor Brittany Vincent so astutely put it, âWebrings are a forgotten antiquity of the past, a solution created to resolve a problem that no longer exists.â Back when websites were both expensive and limitedânot to mention search engines hadnât hit their strideâhaving a little box on the bottom of a site you were already on, one that revealed even more magical places you could visit based on the site you were currently onâŠwell, that was the ultimate luxury.
âOh man, if you stumbled upon* a web ring that you were interested in it was like gold. Bookmark! Not to be confused with StumbleUpon, that was later and also magical.â âDanAykroydFanClub
Which brings us toâŠ
8. StumbleUpon
Who knows where you’ll stumble?
Back in the day, the internet wasnât such an all-knowing entity feeding off of algorithms. Endless exploring through obscurity was part of the fun. No better example of this exists than Stumble Upon, where visitors would click a button and land somewhere else at complete random. It was a game of internet roulette. And it was thrilling.
9. Poking on Facebook
Hey…still here…
Sometimes, internet imitates life. This was the case with Facebookâs âpokeâ feature, where users could click a button to remind another user of their existence. Was it rather pointless? Yes. Was it intrusive? Also yes. Regardless, it was all the rage.
Like many of Facebook’s features, âpokesâ could disappear in the barrage of notifications, which could result in less than ideal realizations.
âI had a friend that poked me and I never noticed the notification. He died. I now have this unreturned poke as a reminder that Iâll never be able to poke them back.â â@Klaus0225
It’s web surfin’ time!
Sure, todayâs technology is faster, more efficient and far reaching, but weâll always have a spot in our hearts for the early internetâs wonky charm. Sort of like those old yearbook photosâŠ