• jihadjihad 16 hours ago

    Cool article, and even cooler site IMO. Brings back memories of 20 years ago, when many sites looked similar. It probably looks radically ugly to the modern eye, but I kind of miss the goofiness of pages like this, down to the poem at the bottom (in Comic Sans, no less).

    Chrome probably would have kicked up some sort of fuss about it, but I was almost hoping to see .swf as the file extension for the wheel GIF at the top. Good times.

    • pimlottc 12 hours ago

      The downside is that it’s not very mobile friendly. Reader mode works okay on Mobile Safari, although it does lose the images.

    • NaOH 6 hours ago

      Related:

      'Maya blue': The mystery dye recreated two centuries after it was lost - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42288864 - Dec 2024 (21 comments)

      'Maya blue': The mystery dye recreated two centuries after it was lost - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42292443 - Dec 2024 (1 comment)

      • dclaw 13 hours ago
        • maxwell 16 hours ago

          Egyptian blue was recently recreated using ancient methods:

          https://news.wsu.edu/press-release/2025/06/02/researchers-re...

          They look chemically quite different: clay, palygorskite/sepiolite, and indigo for Mayan blue; silica, lime, copper, and an alkali for Egyptian blue.

          • tinkertrain 13 hours ago

            For anyone interested in pigments/colors, the National Gallery recently started a podcast on the subject in YouTube, I enjoyed the Prussian Blue history episode:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WK1GSvP6VYs&t=1992s

            • noduerme 13 hours ago

              By chance I came across this after yesterday flying for the first time over the eastern edge of the Yucatan. The turqoise color of the water is otherworldly. I love that they draw the comparison, as this pigment really does resemble it!