http://www.phpforum.su
http://www.php.su
Share other obscure .su websites that were actually made during the Soviet Union rather than virus sites.
This seems appropriate:
http://our-army.su/
Set the mood with some background tunes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U06jlgpMtQs
I'm fascinated by the .su domain. It's like something from an alternate universe where the glorious worker's paradise of CCCP still lives to to thwart capitalist running dogs of Facebook and Amazon.
^ It's strange that their introductory page is a compilation of Operation Flashpoint screenshots...
If you sign up,
You can earn much money and travel for free.
http://goo.gl/YLysV3
>>3
You probably noticed this by now, but you were definitely onto something with this observation! From the organization's about page
>Our Army [USSR] is a virtual combat unit that unites Russian-speaking players of ArmA 3, having a role-playing aspect of a virtual army organization built on the principles of military discipline and behavior on a voluntary but mandatory basis, with the purpose of communication and team games in a cohesive team.
>The basis on which it was formed ON [USSR] in 2001 was the tactical simulator Operation Flashpoint (OFP). It transported us to the era of confrontation between the USSR and the United States, the so-called Cold war, in 1985, when according to the plot, the world was again on the verge of war.
One certainly has to admire the dedication to authenticity, albeit a type of authenticity that has been expressed in a medium that would not manifest itself until a decade following the official dissolution of the Soviet Union itself!
>>2
Sorry to spoil your fun there, but the .su domain was made for Western DNS register with the goal of making top-level domains for all countries present at the time. I believe noone in the USSR, not even military or technology institutes had been connected to the Internet.
Unless you just refer to plain existence of .su domain. Well, it's there isn't it. Just like all the top-level domains owned by corps for advertising themselves. Once I realized how many TLDs are out there, .su lost it's charm to me.