Origins The origins of single-serving sites trace back to the creation of the
World Wide Web. The oldest known single-serving site was
Purple.com, which was launched in 1994. This website contained no links and its only content was a purple-colored background. In August 1995, wwwdotcom.com was launched, the first of several sites dubbed as "The Last Page of the Internet."
Mike Kuniavsky launched Tired.com in November 1997. The site asks the viewer if they are tired and if so, why. In 1999,
Zombo.com was launched, featuring a page with seven rotating
colour wheels. Many people view this site as a parody of several other single-serving sites created in the late 1990s.
Metababy was an early single-serving site that relied on
user generated content.
Spread One of the best known single-serving sites is
YTMND, created in 2001. In February 2008, San Francisco-based writer
Mathew Honan launched a single-serving site (now defunct) called Barack Obama is Your New Bicycle, which generates a random Barack Obama
non sequitur. == See also ==