The circle is finally complete! Now of course you want to use a browser within puter as well: Browser in browser OS in OS in virtual machine...
It's mind boggling how far one can torture the concept of markup documents to eventually arrive at something like this... just so users don't have to install software.
Itchy is maybe exaggerating, but as far as I know, lower class clothes were very coarse compared to modern ones.
A lot of natural fibers need a lot of strength to be spun into finer threads and we didn't really have that on a large scale until the 1800s.
Plus distribution was much harder so in many remote parts were stuck with whatever they made locally, which was most likely subpar even for their times.
Cotton tech in the 1800s really revolutionized clothing.
Silk, and in general almost every type of clothing until modern cotton processing. Most traditional clothing was very coarse and one of the most obvious class indicators, across millenia.
silk was so in demand and so lucrative a product that at one point smuggling silk worms out of china was punishable by death. I think the price of a silk shirt in the middle ages was roughly comparable to a luxury car today.
These comparisons always bring up the fact in my mind that the lowest class people today have so much better sanitation, like toilets compared to kings back then
Given what the web is, it makes me exceedingly sad we don't see the page as a browser of many sites more often. That a page mostly just dials home, to its own server, is radically less than what web architecture could be, is a mere readopting of the past.
Efforts like Tim Berners-Lee's Solid seem like a great first step. There's also a variety of Mastodon clients one can run as PWAs, which both is an example but also a bit of a counter-examples: the page can dial anywhere! But then that Fediverse server intermediates & connects you out to the world. RSS readers too; dialing home to connect with the world. Instead we could perhaps have a client that reaches out directly. Then that activity of reading & browsing, keeping track of favorites and what not: that would have to be sent home or otherwise saved.
It's mind boggling how far one can torture the concept of markup documents to eventually arrive at something like this... just so users don't have to install software.