CoNHistory |
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If you're reading this, you already well know that CoN celebrated its fifth birthday on July 31, 2002 by launching an entirely new site - the first one with an all-new backbone since the very first site. The advances behind CoN5 were nearly a year in the making, and were completed just in time for launch on July 31.
What was the first CoN you visited? Are you a diehard fan from 1997, who remembers an infamous tiled background to the page? Did you come and stick around for the first time in 1999, when the first forums appeared, or in 2001 when the CoN gave up being an FF6-only site? Maybe this is your first visit - but, even so, you're reading this just like everyone else. Maybe you're wondering where CoN came from, or wanting to see some stuff from CoN history so you understand a bit more about where we've been and where we're going. Don't worry, this feature is for you!
31 July 1997 - 31 October 1998
URL: http://members.aol.com/Moogle30/
Staff: 2
Number of Pages: Roughly 30
See This Site in Action!
R51 had just picked up his keyboard in the summer of 1997 to begin a career in web development. Back then, not only was broadband barely on the horizon, unlimited-use ISPs were still nascent—and R51 had to beg his parents and chip in to get unlimited time online to mess with websites.
R51 had just graduated from high school, and was doing little with his life that would be of any interest to this article, aside from this: he had a lot of free time. He'd already made a horrid little example of a personal web page (which really wasn't that bad for the time), and was looking for something else to do. After a month of being frustrated, trying to find a subject, he stumbled upon his favorite game, three years old and still jacked into his SNES. He, with AOL Message Board buddy Moogle30, grabbed an FF3 Strategy Guide and went to work.
Oblivious to any competition, the pair culled data from the guide, beating it to a pulp going after character data, Amano art, and a thin packet of other data. CoN launched on July 31, 1997 after about a month's work, and was astonished when a hundred people came in the first week.
The site wasn't pretty, and the site wasn't all that popular, but it was a labor of love. It set the philosophy that would become the guiding principle of CoN future - Do It Because You Love It.
Important Milestones:
1 November 1998 - 23 January 1999
URL: http://members.aol.com/Moogle30/
Staff: 2
Number of Pages: Roughly 50
See This Site in Action!
Everyone gets tired of the same old sights and sounds sometime. It took a little over a year for the first iteration of CoN to get onto R51's nerves. The colors started to look too dark; the washed-out appearance of Terra on the Magitek Armor was losing its luster. And Old English-style calligraphy for the fonts simply had to go.
R51 cranked out most of the second version of CoN while on a weeklong vacation. That alone should go miles to show the overall quality of said site. Version 2 was essentially a new painted face over the same site, and it just didn't go over all that well. The background colors clashed with the text, and R51 was bedeviled fixing stylistic problems all over the site. Meanwhile, Moogle30 was starting to drift away into his University studies, leaving development in a much slower state, particularly development of new and enhanced content.
Caves of Narshe 2 was essentially dead in December of 1998, when competition arrived in the form of The World of Ruin, an FF3 site launched with the newest in graphical, HTML, and JavaScript technology. When their Webmaster contacted R51 on AOL to say that The World of Ruin would bury CoN and that he intended to shut us down, well, it was time for a change.
However, the second CoN was a huge turning point for the site. Among other things, witness the birth of the modern CoN through the following:
24 January 1999 - 31 December 2000
URL: http://members.aol.com/Moogle30/
Staff: 1
Number of Pages: Roughly 100
See the first CoN3 in Action!
See the second CoN3 in Action!
See the final CoN3 in Action!
As seen above, CoN felt the threat of competition at the end of 1998; in the typically melodramatic style of R51, the decision was made to adapt or die. And as has since happened time and again, CoN adapted because R51 had no desire to let it die.
CoN3 was, up until the launch of CoN5, the most dramatic departure in style and implementation yet. Whereas the previous designs had been bright, bold, and colorful, CoN3 was dark and subdued. The overall effect was far more sophisticated overall.
There were actually several different versions of CoN3 that all used the same general layout. When CoN3 launched originally, the site was created of a basic frameset with four panes. The top pane crossed the bottom three, which were split into two columns, and included a JavaScript-based randomizing header that contained text and an image of an FF6 character to title the page "Final Fantasy III - Caves of Narshe". This initial layout had a left side pane dedicated for a drop-down, Javascript-powered navigational menu from which users could select a site section and have it pull into the main pane. Besides being Javascript at a time when many users didn't use Javascript, and being generally lacking in style, this substyle lasted only a few months.Windows-style file tree that navigated throughout the page. This setup had many bug-related issues, and as such it didn't last long.
We switched then to an even heavier Javascript solution that was very cutting-edge for 1999— a Windows-style collapsable filetree system. While this looked pretty awesome for the time, it wasn't so hot in terms of usability, with different versions being required for Netscape (remember Netscape?) and Internet Explorer and a variety of bugs that were beyond the scope of repair for developers of R51's skillset at the time. For these reasons, CoN quickly killed it for the final revision, a multiple-page navigation system that operated smoothly and quickly within the frame.
In the meantime, the header frame changed. With a little help from a graphics guy named Artificial_Kaos, a header was developed that was far more stylish (and far less black) header. It provided easy access to all the great features of CoN3 like the guestbook, site help, and new and far fancier forum.
Milestones:
1 January 2001 - 30 July 2002
URL: http://www.cavesofnarshe.com/ , http://con.opgaming.com/
Staff: 5 - 8
Number of Pages: Nearly 400
See This Site in Action!
R51 was, at a time, employed as an intern for a major e-consulting firm. His entire job was HTML and JavaScript. Nothing else. Day in, day out. Combine that with the fact that the project he was assigned to had no reason for HTML or JavaScript for the first month of the internship, and bam. You have CoN4.
This site used an immense amount of technology to which R51 had never previously had access. As an excuse to learn Photoshop 5.5 and Dreamweaver 3, he began development of a massive update to CoN that would involve far more impressive graphics and complicated coding than anyone had ever seen in a previous version.
This is where it got tricky, though - nobody would ever take the site seriously, regardless of cool design, unless it could get up into the upper echelon of FF sites. That tends to require money, sadly, and R51 is a notorious cheapskate. So, here's how it went down.
Forums: The UBB software is not cheap. It was $200 when CoN4 was in development, probably more now, greedy bastards. However, one was purchased for R51's project but never used. And as such CoN inherited it. How nice, eh? But even more than that, R51 knew nothing of Perl. Luckily, a guy previously mentioned in the CoN3 section by the name of Tiddles did. And he knew UBBs back and forth. There's a staff member for you.
Staff: The site was starting to get a bit ungainly toward the end of CoN3, way too much for a person to add to or maintain himself. It was time to call in the chips of the really good friends made over the years of FF3; Neal, Rubicant, come on down! Rocky, do some work! Elena99, you're more than welcome! Eventually, we added some more great staff, but the core has remained the same since months before the launch of CoN4.
Domain: Who really wants to type a long address to come to a site? Time to invest a little change and get http://www.cavesofnarshe.com online. Of course, that requires a new host, too. We hooked up first with a free host that worked great for us for a few months, but more on that later.
All the pieces were in place, and launch was a beautiful thing. However, nothing is perfect and we fought a lot of ups and downs in an effort to get to where we are today.
Soon after launch, we realized that our shiny new UBB forums were true bandwidth hogs. We were going well over our transfer limit every month, and we were being threatened by the host that we would get shut down. Hence, we nuked half the forums (the most popular but least important half, unfortunately). This caused a great uproar and a loss of overall traffic.
We were still, however, able to bring a new game permanently into the CoN. FF4, considered by many to be the only FF close to matching FF6, has always been begging for attention but receiving little. CoN wanted to change that, and so launched a FF4 section that up until now has still sadly lagged behind in terms of completeness and popularity. This necessitated a lot of new image work and layout play, which in hindsight damaged CoN4 badly. The motive was, and still is, good, though.
Soon after that, this great free host started putting up popup ads on the site without permission. As if losing half the forums wasn't bad enough, well, this was the last straw. We jumped ship as soon as we could to The Legacy Network, who promised us good stuff all around. And we got it. We thought we had a good home! Small ads, lots of space, and development tools that gave us the idea for CoN5! What could go wrong? Well, a lot of things, unfortunately. The host overreached, and for some reason the hostmaster thought he was capable of hosting 40 sites his first month. When the bills started racking up, he started abusing his hostees to cover his own mistakes. The final abuse was in January of 2002, when CoN received an email informing us that we were losing hosting because we just weren't popular enough. About 20 other sites got the same email.
R51 was panicked. After all the effort he had put into CoN, he couldn't let it die for lack of a host. However, having staff paid off again, as Rubicant offered a permanent home at OPGaming, his own server. R51 gladly accepted, and CoN5 development continued while CoN4 charged on with strong forums and a brand new IRC chat channel. Legacy? Well, they failed about two months later. Incompetent management, we bet.
So, that brings us to where we are now. http://con.opgaming.com/ - a happy little village. You know about CoN5, since you're there right now. Why not read a bit more about how it came to be?
Milestones:
31 July 2002
URL: http://www.cavesofnarshe.com/ , http://con.opgaming.com/
Staff: 8
Number of Pages: Cut to about 50, plus forums.
We mentioned in the CoN4 section that our move to Legacy sparked R51's design imagination yet again, well after CoN4 had started to stagnate. CoN4, new host and all, just wasn't going anywhere. The design was good, but there were others out there with far better technology.
At that point, R51 had a mildly boring epiphany: the new host has PHP and mySQL. Why not take advantage? For those who are not as geeky as the site masters, here's a quick explanation. SQL is a database that allows you to store all kinds of chunks of information in a compact form. PHP, among other things, interacts with SQL to take that information from the database and make it visible to a web browser. It's faster, cleaner, and far more space efficient than HTML can ever be.
So R51 set off to learn PHP for the new site, while bringing in the staff and friends to compile the massive database that would contain all of the game data. In the meantime, he began generating potential designs.
Concept 1: "The Arch"
As you can see from the pictures, the first design concept that was mocked up bore a striking resemblance to an archway. In the first color scheme, the colors were ridiculously bright and bold. They just didn't mesh well, and the cookie-cutter satin texture, in hindsight, kinda screams "tawdry!"
The second picture shows a revised color scheme that burned the retinas far less. The dark, dark blues were far more attractive, but the overall design still was not fantastic. The navigation had an appearance of being very bubbly and cartoonish, and didn't fit in well with the style of the previous versions of CoN.
You'll notice the addition of fanart to this second image. Near the beginning of CoN5 development, the staff were discussing ways to make the site a unique place for Final Fantasy fans. Having always been a fan of fanart, R51 decided to put some pieces into the layout, which you can see here. And it worked out well, aside from having decapitated Terra in this first design.
You'll note at this point, Hikaroo was brought on to the staff, having impressed the entire site with her fanart. She was detailed to create some new pieces for the site - but nobody aside from staff was told exactly why. R51's a secretive fellow.
Concept 2: "The Final"
The Arch concept just didn't sit well overall with the staff. It was good, but not great. So R51 went back to the Photoshop and made some major modifications. What he came up with is essentially what you see today as CoN5. You've already seen the finished product, so we'll take a moment just to review some interesting tidbits you may have missed.
Tiddles, based on the evolved design, primarily wrote the final layout code. He took the compromise of using some modern CSS design to create the desired effect, at the expense of offending the sensibilities of older browsers, the argument being that it is now possible to download a relatively standards-compliant browser that will run on the majority of platforms. A particular feature that troubles ancient browsers is the CSS background position and repeating control - a shame, really, since CoN2 would have really benefited from it.
And, now, since you've seen CoN5 and what led up to its debut, there's really no more reason to spout off useful information. It's trivia time.
But that only brings us to mid-2002, and it's a bit past that now. So you can either discuss what you've seen here, or continue on to the next chapter!
CoNHistory |
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