Fellowship of the Rings: An Introduction
Dateline: 04/21/97 - Weekly feature from your Guide To Personal Web PagesMost of the major search engines and directories assign personal pages to navigational oblivion. Indeed, the email newsletters and discussion lists where creators of personal pages congregate bubble over with the frustration of those unable to get their pages listed in a mainstream directory.
I say, the heck with all that.
There's another approach to exploring the personal-page phenomenon, one developed by the creators themselves. You can think of it as a separate navigational system just for the "Undernet": a novel, decentralized, and soothingly non-hierarchical way to experience and organize Web content that's ideal for personal pages. Indeed, it's downright circular: Webrings.
Simply, a Webring is a group of sites linked in an organized way to create something like a guided tour. The concept is quite literal. The sites share a common navigation system so that when you've clicked through them all you're back where you started. But it's not as controlled as all that. You can enter the Ring at any point, travel it in any direction, list its next five sites, jump to a random one, or get a list of all the pages in the loop.
You knew some people couldn't leave well enough alone -- they had to go linear with the Webring concept. The Rail takes you "East" and "West" across the Web. And, oh yeah, you can change trains, too.
Unsurprisingly, the search/directory sites haven't nearly caught up with the proliferation of Rings. A search of Yahoo reveals some 50 in its directory, whereas Webring's Ringworld directory -- a great place to start any exploration of the Web, I might add -- lists about 2,000 out of more than 8,000 created under its auspices.
Rings tend to be manageable in size: 20 or so sites is the norm, though some include more than 100. Each has its own ground rules and at least one person fulfills the role of "maintainer" to clear new entrants and such. But in all, there's a sense of community. Take the Open Pages ring, which says it's for "netizens who keep web journals and diaries, daily ramblings and sporadic babblings." It has pretty strict rules about updating and archiving -- this smoothing is a major reason why Rings are perhaps the best way to experience personal pages -- yet it boasts more than 80 members.

