Spyke
sh.itjust.works

Not 100% gone yet, but gas powered yard tools are dying. Battery powered tools are just better in 99% of use cases.

Two stroke engines do seem dead though which is awesome, because mixed gas was a massive pain in the ass.

79

I had a 11kW two-stroke motorbike and while it was very important for my rural youth, I do not want it back. Fuck the constant oil refueling, fuck the fumes, fuck the noise. If I ever get a motorbike again, it'd be electric.

21

The fumes and noise of those little engines makes me excited that the battery versions are taking over.

19
whodatdairreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I remember fighting with gas weed whackers endlessly as a teen trying to do chores… having to dick with the choke for a cold start, having to pump prime them (and it being possible to over prime and lock them out), then you had to carry them around and use them with the exhaust at steak searing temperature… and if you didn’t know how to tune an idle they’d just die in your hands if you didn’t goose the throttle occasionally

This is a great one - don’t miss small gas engines even a little bit lol

18

Ngl I always thought starting 2-stroke engines was pretty fun. But I certainly don't miss the noise or the horrible pollution.

2

Oh god I want to gift ALL OF MY NEIGHBOURS BATTERY LEAF BLOWERS. I bought one, it's amazing, and we're about to go into autumn 🤢

6
iiireply
mander.xyz

Love my electric chainsaw except for in winter. Battery life is horrible.

6
sh.itjust.works

I'm perfectly content with my little electric chainsaw. Basically I only ever use it if a tree dies or falls in a storm, it actually starts unlike the gas ones I've had...It wouldn't be up to the task of chopping enough wood to heat my house through the winter but for occasional use it's better than gas.

6
HelixDab2reply
lemm.ee

I do use a chainsaw for cutting wood to heat. (Although this winter is unpleasantly warm. Thanks, climate change...) There is definitely no way that any electric saw would be able to keep up, esp. since you can't readily drag 500y of extension cord behind you. Chainsaws could absolutely be made cleaner though. Unfortunately, I think that 2-stroke engines have a much higher power:weight ratio than 4-stroke, so we're stuck using gas mixed with oil, which pumps out smog.

1
sh.itjust.works

I kinda wonder if it would be possible to make a 2 stroke engine that doesn't burn its own oil. Like, essentially supercharge it. Use an impeller on the flywheel to pump air into the cylinder so that the crankcase could be full of heavy oil. Though that might not work with a chainsaw since it has to be held at various angles.

2

Take two.

If that doesn't work, the channel on YouTuber is "Driving 4 Answers", and the title of the video is, "The Only Video You'll Ever Need to Watch to Know how 4 Stroke and 2 Stroke Engines Work and Differ".

1
TwanHEreply
lemmy.world

The electric chainsaw is the only one I still don't like being battery powered. Indeed the battery life is too short for most jobs.

But the noise is also part of the experience, it just doesn't feel as Powerfull without it.

4

Lawnmower and snowblower have been the only things I haven't been happy with being electric. Climate change might help me not need the snowblower at all.

2
lemmy.world

Do you keep the battery inside or on a shed? Much better for the battery to be kept indoors if that's an option.

3

Yeah stored in a shed. It's not an option to keep it indoors as there's no heated indoors.

1
ryathalreply
sh.itjust.works

Wired tools are also a pain unless you have a limited scope for movement.

1

I make sure to have plenty of extension cords, and sockets hanging from most ceilings (with a place to tuck them away).

I don't know hoe relevant this is, but I am in a 240 volt country. So extension cords don't really run hot or poorly even with quite a bit of distance and high loads

1
lemmy.ca

It's getting legit difficult to find corded tools, corded mowers are fine for the size of yard I have, but choice in those was extremely limited. Yeah battery ones exist, they're twice the price for the cheapest ones and only go up from there, I can live with an extension cord.

1

I haven't had much trouble after ditching google and bing. Except for headphones that take aaa batteries

1
discuss.tchncs.de

Really? Some appliances are a great fit for battery but others less so.

An electric mower just doesn't feel right to me.

1
ryathalreply
sh.itjust.works

The mower is in that 1% unless you have a really small lot. It gets cost prohibitive if you need multiple sets of batteries to finish your lawn.

1

I use one on a cord. I put it on my shoulder so I don't ride over it. Never had any problems.

2

Smoking everywhere. For anyone who wasn't around for the 70s/80s/90s, everything was tinged yellow and smelled of smoke. Car/plane/train seats had built-in ashtrays. Restaurants had smoking sections separated from the non-smoking sections by waist-high walls.

I have asthma and it sucked. Not sure if I grew out of it as I got older or if there's just not a miasma of smoke around everywhere, but it rarely bothers me anymore.

70

At the risk of becoming too anti-casual, anti-gay slurs were so common in the US up until the mid/late 90s, if you weren't there for it you just have no idea. One of the Bill and Ted movies (I think the first one?) just randomly dropping it in there as a joke, where the slur is the joke, is a good example of just how it was then. There's still bigotry but it's not as casual and pervasive.

57

It's weird watching average sitcoms from then because of this. The more popular ones are sometimes better but even Seinfeld wasn't great with it.

12
stinkyreply
redlemmy.com

Eminem has a song where he casually drops an F bomb.

10

He dropped like a thousand of them. He was using it regularly until sometime in the 2010s.

Eminem is weird cause he leans left but will use any word— save for n word and now f— as long as it rhymes or fits the scheme, then does nearly nothing else offensive. It’s like words are exempt from his morality.

22

a lot of media used the F slur well into the 2000s. it's pretty shocking to watch nowdays

3
lemm.ee

Dial-up internet. I would open a website and go do something else for a minute until it loads, then fight with my parents when they pick up the phone when I've been downloading something for 3 hours.

37
5714reply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

We had very late internet infrastructure upgrade, so at the end we had a bluetooth dial-up internet router in the early 2010s...

14

Internet over bluetooth is a crime against humanity

18

@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] When I was still in school, the Minitel was still used to register us to pass our diplomas. One of the schools I was in even still used an actual Minitel terminal to do so. (Most used a compatibility option integrated in dial-ups modems sold in the country. As did my father a couple of times for other unrelated tasks that couldn't yet be done via internet, when we first got it at home.)

2

As long as the law is properly enforced. It's worse to have smokers just all over the place

6
lemmy.world

Women having to get husband’s permission to open a bank account (speaking of the US).

29

Aiso used to be true in France, along with any operations on it. Hence why my mom preciously my grand-ma's old "Liret A" with the mension "mon assisted of her husband". (My grand-dad himself found the situatin ridiculous, and had made the necesary to ensure she could oprate their bank acounts without him.)

2
feddit.org

The lack of privacy, independence, and freedom that generally comes with childhood.

28
Obireply
sopuli.xyz

Disposable cameras are making a return.

4
ryathalreply
sh.itjust.works

Disposable cameras and Polaroids have been getting popular at weddings in place of guest books or as something for the guests to do during the reception. The couple then gets something physical they can keep.

5
klemptorreply
startrek.website

Interesting. I still wonder why, because this was a trend in the '90s that died out with camera phones and social media. Maybe it's a retro throwback trend that got popular with younger folks? Still, I thought they stopped manufacturing Polaroid paper, and can you still get film developed at like the grocery store or a pharmacy?

1

It's definitely a hipster thing yeah, they aren't selling them cheap either since it's a novelty item now. You can still get film developed but same thing, it's a niche thing now so fewer places to do it and more expensive.

2

Medicine in general has gotten a lot better. I'm also able to buy stuff like silken tofu without having to drive quite far to find a specialty store that sells it.

21
Skuareply
kbin.earth

This is probably completely uninteresting to everyone else, but this has re-surfaced an old memory for me. I had a really dull data entry job one summer, and the crowd I worked with included a few odd figures. One particular guy was always making jokes that were just a bit too edgy for the workplace, especially amongst a bunch of people that didn't know him well enough to know how much he meant any of it. For some reason, completely unprompted, he brought up that "you never see white dog turds any more". Everyone heard this as "white doctors" and immediately winced in anticipation of some incoming racism, and everyone still heard it that way when he tried to clarify several times. Turns out no, it was 100% innocent, just weird.

He was fired for unrelated reasons a few weeks later; he had gone to the nearby pub on his lunch break and had several pints

8

For anyone that doesn't know, dog food used to contain a lot of bone meal; as dog poop degraded (?), the bone meal would remain. Hence white dog poop. I think that this changed due to tighter regulations on pet food.

4
lemmy.world

Pagers. Having to find a pay phone. Looking through newspapers for jobs. Absolutely gutless emissions- strangled malaise era cars with horrible brakes and numb steering.

14
klemptorreply
startrek.website

Looking through the paper for a job was in some ways better. Now it's so hard to even get past the initial filters to an actual human because job postings get spammed with hundreds of applications, many from people who are underqualified and/or straight up lying on their resume. For remote jobs, you're competing against the whole country whereas with jobs in the paper you were mostly competing against those in your local area.

8
sleepmodereply
lemmy.world

Is funny how we have all this tech for it and they’ve only managed to enshittify the process. Some sites are going back to the original purpose like indeed but it’s still like tossing your resume into space.

6
sleepmodereply
lemmy.world

Capitalism is the point. They're usually fine tools until they have investors steering the ship.

4

Pagers certainly still exist.

Troubleshooting issues with them is a pain too.

That being said, I've only seen them in the medical field.

3
lemmy.ca

It's not "gone", but the notion of it being "acceptable" is gone:

Using 'retard' as a slur, not only for people with intellectual disabilities but also just for people or things you think were stupid.

12

Using ‘retard’ as a slur, not only for people with intellectual disabilities

That's actually the one group of people I've never seen anyone call that, lol.

10
Oberynreply
lemmy.world

Sadly that slur's starting to become in vogue again ⚰

5
Kitreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I was gonna say the same. I saw the R word casually dropped in a CRT enthusiast group the other day and called the guy out, and a bunch of people stood with me, but nearly as many brushed it off as no big deal.

4
Oberynreply
lemmy.world

Worst part ? Seen LEFTISTS say it wen clearly they should know better ❗❗ And in my experience see it on tumblr more than any where else

Oar wat about "sch⬛⬛⬛" ⁉️⁉️ Wen we'll ever move past describing (peop|thing)s using ableist words

-1

Another person with a slurs list?!

I keep mine in a little book in my font pocket so its close to my heart.

Might need to go digital soon, its almost full.

2
iii
mander.xyz

CDs and DVDs and (video)casettes. Took up so much room, annoying to use while travelling.

11
lemmy.ml

CDs are great though :( I love that I can rip them and back them up, play them wherever I go, no licences or streaming. :)

7
azuthreply
sh.itjust.works

So you don't actually love CDs but the fact you can not use them after buying them. You can still buy non DRM music you don't have to subscribe and you could rip or copy streamed music if it wasn't easier to pirate it.

CDs by the way also are subject to licenses and DRM has started to appear on them. The reason they did not try as hard as with DVDs and Blurays is that Music is trivial to copy, people have been ok with taping from the radio after all. If video on physical media was still a thing you would have plenty of DRM, they'd probably make you buy a newer player after 5 years or so.

2
lemmy.ml

I love CDs.

I love that they play in my car, don't take up a tonne of space, have liner notes, and occupy physical space. I stick them on in the house as much as my LPs, and like picking out what to play.

I'm okay with being in the minority, but the sentimental value of where I was when I picked an album, where I've listened to it, and who I was with means a great deal to me. :) I download too, but usually things just sit on my drive and don't get listened to.

You present a good point about licences, but I've not ever experienced this, and my main concern with licencing is things vanishing from my library - it bothers me when an album vanishes from spotify, and that never happens with physical media (same is true of downloaded music to be fair). It's not that I'm blindly loyal to Phillips or whatever, just that I like this format for my specific use case.

7
azuthreply
sh.itjust.works

Can't argue with non licensing/copying/backup reasons for preferring CDs or other physical media.

But a lot of people are under the misconceptions that things like licensing came to existence after the switch away from physical media or that there were not DRM in physical media, therefore switching back to a physical media would solve the current problems with lack of control over our media. It will not.

What we need is DRM-free digital media, which we can use wherever and however we want. Just like a lot of us did with MP3s and CDs.

3

I'm with you 100% :) I have a record collection too, but heck if I'd want only records! There's a use case for each, even if mine's oddly specific.

I feel Steve Albini's take on CDs hit it correctly, it was basically to the effect of "welcome to the rich man's eight track tape, the music industry's newest way to make you re-buy your music and spend more money".

I will say he couldn't have forseen CDs lasting like they have and being the last big physical format, but I think it's very true. You're right that physical formats don't negate the greed/capitalism, and there's a compulsive desire from companies to control how you enjoy the media you paid for and "own".

In short, I completely agree with you and the media industries are really restrictive/anti-art, but love CDs as a format. :)

4
sopuli.xyz

Quality was also very low. Nostalgia blurred our memories, watching/listening that stuff today is wild.

7
eestileibreply
sh.itjust.works

CDs still sound better than streaming.

DVD and VHS, absolutely they look like trash now.

15

Cassettes can sound great if ya got Type III metal tapes. Lots of cheap tapes were Type I, which don't sound nearly as good.

VHS tho nah, as nostalgic as I am for it, it's just a bad option today lol

5

I’m so fucking glad we’ve stopped calling women “hysterical” whenever we don’t believe them. That word is so blatantly misogynistic and it seems to be dying out now.

11

Orkut, Flogão (kind of a precursor to instagram, it was mostly used by high schoolers around 2004-6), Skype, Internet Explorer and ActiveX

10

I kinda miss Flash because of the amount of interesting games made with it. Some very cool animations too, good thing Ruffle exists nowadays.

The problem (besides Adobe buying Macromedia) was every fucking business deciding to make their entire sites in Flash

5
lemmy.org

Objectively, dial-up.

Otoh, what I would really badly like to become a thing again is actual media ownership, ie. not having streaming services randomly yank your stuff away from you.

Also, I would nominate the fact that the 'It's obsolete as soon as you get it in the door' meme hasn't been valid for decades now, but hardware manufacturers, Windows itself, and the game industry are trying really hard to make that a thing again seemingly.

9
Noggogreply
programming.dev

Yup! Spotify removing things off my playlists was a big initial factor into me getting into self hosting. All my music streams through Plex now and I haven't looked back

4
DFX4509Breply
lemmy.org

Even DRM-free storefronts like 7Digital for music or GOG for games aren't immune to random delistings.

3

For music, I've pulled it into my self hosted Plex setup, so even if the original sources like Bandcamp die, I am hosting my own copy.

Games are their own beast. Hard to do similar self hosted concepts when there are servers involved, other players, etc. I'm still 100% on the "streaming services" for games.

1

Smoking everywhere and anywhere. Younger folks have no idea how ubiquitous it was, not to sound boomerish, but everything smelled so bad, and people would smoke in places that would shock you now, like in hospitals they would smoke in the nurses station, if you walked into a clothing store at the mall they'd be smoking at the counter, etc. Even when they did things like making that glass room for smokers at Tim Hortons, I once saw a woman sitting in there with her toddler in a stroller puffing away. It was actually amazing that anyone put a stop to public smoking because so many people did it.

6

Yeah those things would get HOT. like, hot enough to melt plastic. And they were really wasteful.

3
threeduckreply
aussie.zone

I don't care much about the supposed fidelity, but having a group of mates around each pick an album from my stack is a lot of fun.

It stops people from focusing too hard on the music and going "oh wait lemme queue up this track" etc.

3

CDs would fulfill the exact same use-case while being more convenient, space efficient and cheaper.

2

Not to parrot everyone else but, Smoking for sure. The damn smell.

Another is probally lead based products. Such a health risk and was so pointless

1
Boomkop3reply
reddthat.com

A couple years ago it was an issue in Christian religious organizations bad enough that there's plenty of memes about it. How much this is still the case, I do not know

2

It was an enormous issue under Pope Benedict, yes, and then I think Pope Francis took things in the complete opposite direction and cracked down on the issue. But alas, it's still a problem. And not really just in churches but anywhere where an in-loco-parentis system is involved, which includes things like regular school teachers and daycare providers as well, which is one contributing factor against the idea of children in regular occupations. As an asexual, a part of me wonders if simply screening people would solve the issue.

4
lemmy.world

While not technicly gone outright , forums

Hate juggling accounts to be part of communities , some forums (have strict rules|ban VPNs|.*) . There's reason they've been succeeded by (subreddits|discord servers|.*)

-6
iiireply
mander.xyz

Oh, I preferred that. There was much less pressure to conform. All fora had their own "personality", in a way. Small little islands inhabited by people having fun in their own ways.

44

As far as I can tell, not really no except for the weird insular communist ones. What's the difference in personality between lemmy.ca and sh.itjust.works?

6

Discord is so much worse than forums though. Lemmy/reddit are better than every website having their own forums though.

23

Hard disagree. I much prefer forums and still am a member of some. The only thing reddit really had going was how broad and easy-to-create it was. It allowed for non-technical people to make cool, niche forums and people to find and participate.

10
P00ptartreply
lemmy.world

I miss forums. If I went to a specific car forum, that's what discussion would be about. No random assholes bringing politics into every conversation. No trolls or people just there to make a joke for upvotes.

6

Yeah, no, I really miss the forums days.

In general I miss the pre "just a couple of sites for everything" internet.

And I mean, there's a reason that Discord added a "forum" channel type

5