Spyke
feddit.uk

I think my equivalent at that age would have been going to a friend's house to watch their newly acquired colour TV instead of our B/W one.

79

There’s a motel near where my mom lives that only recently updated their sign from “colour TV” to “High Def TV”

14
BillyClarkreply
piefed.social

I remember the good old days when my friend would come over and we'd turn on my black and white TV, and change it to channel 3 so that we could play a "doubles tennis" version of pong on the little pong console we owned.

Now, this may cause you to exclaim, "How fucking old is this guy?" But what you may not know is that my parents rarely threw old electronics away. That could have happened maybe as late as the mid 90s.

9

I have a tube TV, a tape recorder and a gramophone literally in my room. Living in grandparents' old house at the moment. Super cool

6
jetreply
hackertalks.com

I had a Panasonic crystal clear b&w tv until 2004... I loved that TV.

I watched most of star trek in black and white with a high pitched whine only I could hear

4

I've got a portable b&w TV that I used until they shut down the analog transmitters. It has a really good tuner that would pick up lots of channels with the built in antenna. The digital transmitters are much weaker. I can't receive a single one with an indoor antenna.

4

We didn't get a color TV till about 1977. My mom didn't like the colors on the earlier TVs, but dad finally convinced her when she saw a Sony TV.

3

We had color TV and it picked up 2 channels. One out picked up really well, one decent and one if you turned the antenna just right and the weather was favorable but you'd lose the other two.

2
lemmy.ml

Now we're all reading Lemmy and trying to save open computing because we're the only generation who knows what it is.

77
lemmy.world

I teach computer science, and when we talk about networking and the internet, I apologize to the students. It wasn't supposed to be like this.

30
lemmy.today

It wasn't supposed to be like this.

I'm wondering if you have any reference resources on-hand for this. Like if we can identify where exactly it went wrong and how it was supposed to be, to point to in a somewhat scholarly sense.

As a 90's kid self-taught dabbler in comp-sci / FOSS advocate, my first thoughts for ultimately disasterous elements usually go to corporate disruption, like the iPhone. Maybe if we go further back, Internet Explorer?

I feel like this stuff is intentionally buried to be as if it had never been. General computer knowledge used to be more commonplace, now gen-pops are ignorant slaves to stupid black-box appliances and monolithic rent-seeking cloud services. It sucks.

We are the resistance though. The indie web is growing by the day. Gen-Z has been ditching social media. Open source stuff like Linux or Blender are exploding within niche circles like gaming and indie creator spaces. There's hope. :)

7
teslekovareply
sh.itjust.works

Reagan. It's always Reagan. However, in this case I do not know the specific steps that deregulation took between his disaster of a presidency and the present day.

7

Reagan. It's always Reagan.

Gosh dammit, isn't it always‽ I know beforehand, corruption in the late 70's laid the groundwork that culminated in the finishing move that was Reagan upending everything, but it's crazy how destructive his reign was, and how we're still dealing with the consequences, and how there are still people that think anything he did was remotely good for the people.

For our overseas brethren, replace with Thatcher. Total monster.

Yeah, I'm curious about the true effects dereg had on the tech industry as a whole. Like, would we still have gotten PCs in our households like we did? Or would the government have say, cracked down harder on Microsoft and Apple monopolies?

I wonder if there's any way we can really know. Because if we can see where it went wrong, maybe we can paint a clearer picture of how it could be turned right...

4

All unregulated systems consolidate. This is the natural evolution of letting media and data mining run without any guide rails. This is why the ultimate concept for all these companies is to provide access to everything... Your friends, your shopping, your entertainment, all discussions, all money, all search, every service goes through the monolith. Nobody is regulating any of this, because the barrier to entry for software has been so low, they'll say they aren't monopolies, and we don't regulate relatively normally run business.

2

what? foss computing was always and always will be incredibly niche.

computing has always been dominated by large corporations and non-techincal users have always considers computers to be magical and mysterious and confusing.

web

0
Macreply
mander.xyz

You're under the impression a single generation is here...?

4

This comment is real.

Previous generations grew up without Internet at all, and later generations grew up in a world where you get an iPad in your face from age 3 and haven't known anything other than corporate centralisation.

There's only so many of us were online in that brief period of time where the Internet felt like something that would unite people, rather than being algorithmically weaponised to divide us.

3

I had a hard time getting past that game's age verification, which consisted of trivia questions an 18-year-old American should know, because I was a 6-year-old German.

But I just systematically tried out all combinations (taking notes) until it launched. And I beat the game, learning the first basics of English that way.
So yeah, some of the first English words I learned were "preservative", "hooker" and "Spanish Fly".

13
lemmy.world

One day a coworker announced he had bought a PC with the new 80286 processor running at 10 MHz (an unheard of blistering speed).

That afternoon the entire Engineering Department went to his house to look at it.

38
lemmy.world

That was my first real computer. We had two games: where in the world is carmen Sandiego and kings quest 4 rosella's peril. There was not enough disk space to have both games (size 2 5.25 floppies each IIRC) installed at the same time. Then we got quest for glory. That was special.

12
fedia.io

The millennial amount of old haha

Back when 1984 was just a story, not Government policy

33
lemmy.ml

The Youths (20-somethings) at work have a new 3d printer, and were explaining how they were using the printer to print additional parts for the printer, so I said "oh, like downloading Limewire pro" and the blank looks made me feel so old.

32
lemmy.world

You download limewire and then you use that to download a pirated copy of limewire pro.

36
Jarixreply
lemmy.world

Ahh. I used Kazaa was unaware of limewire pro. Thanks for the clarificatiion

9
lemmy.world

Diablo 2 required OVER 1GB of hard drive space to install and 3 CDs. Computer game install sizes are getting out of control.

N64 with 4 controllers and Forsaken while getting a sweet sweet 15 frames per second of motion sickness-inducing awesomeness.

LAN party just to play the Unreal Tournament demo.

Discovering you could use 3333333333333333333 as the CD key for Starcraft.

Heroes of Might and Magic hotseat multiplayer games taking all weekend.

xvid movies that would fit on a CD-R

"Have you guys heard of this broadband thing?"

Monthly nerd conclave to install Linux from the latest Linux Magazine CD. Mandrake has this new KDE 1.0 thing, looks neat.

Magic: The Gathering - Coat of Arms is dumb why does he have 2 of them AND Slivers??!

WAAAY before that: MUDs via BBS (and later Telnet/zMUD 5.55)

29
lemmy.world

xvid movies that would fit on a CD-R

Doom9.org

Dvd-decrypter

GordianKnot

WAAAY before that: MUDs via BBS (and later Telnet/zMUD 5.55)

That pirates game on early Facebook gave strong BBS/MUD vibes, back before FB became obvious cancer.

7
lemmy.world

A dvd with crouching tiger hidden dragon and gossip girl on the cover, but it's actually 8 Indian movies

Bootleg karaoke machine with Eason Chan's greatest hits and Frank Sinatra's I Did It My Way featuring a music video of two people holding hands on Causeway Bay.

vcd's from the place around the corner, the one with the fat black cd case that had every title in alphabetical order

A dragon ball vhs tape dubbed in cantonese that includes the first half of a random episode of Journey to the West

Guess where I grew up

4

Doom9.org

I remember when the AACS encryption key leaked and they started to DMCA everyone so people were printing merch with:

45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2

Printed on it.

3
chiliedoggreply
lemmy.world

We ran a 2-node bbs out of our house.

For those too young to know what that means:

We had 2 computers networked to each other running the bulletin board - each with a separate dedicated phone line. Each line had call forwarding set up to the other, so users could dial either number, and if one of the nodes was available they could log in. And the real magic was that 2 users could actually live chat instead of just leaving messages. You haven't lived until you've played multiplayer TradeWars or LORD.

7
lemmy.today

You haven't lived until you've played multiplayer TradeWars or LORD.

Funny enough with how ridiculously busy everybody is anymore, I've been really interested in researching asynchronous multiplayer game concepts.

Like stuff that's engaging enough to leave you thinking about it between turns, but doesn't require your constant attention. Stuff to play at work, basically. Lol

4

I was restricted from dial-up use at home until after 9PM. We did eventually get a 2nd line and, way later, a 1Mb ADSL connection.

So we, as TAs in the computer lab, 'broke' a PC and put it in the wiring closet. It was actually just running Linux (the teacher new but looked the other way) so we could SSH in get on IRC and queue on FTP downloads (10Mb, so fast!) of pirated music/movies to later burn/sell on CDs. The computer lab sold blanks for $1/ea, but we figured out really quick that a spool of 100 was about $40 at Circuit City.

4
Jarixreply
lemmy.world

The MUD I used to play is still a better game than almost everything else I've ever played. That being said all MUDs MUSHES and MOOs were not the same lol.

Ahh MUDconnector.com

4

Ahh MUDconnector.com

RIP

I used it (and its Java telnet client) to play MUDs at school in the computer lab. I could use regular telnet.exe but it, at least, rendered the colors.

1
sopuli.xyz

I cannot for the life of me remember what our MUDD was, but I still remember our local BBS because it was called the Forbidden Playground. It was not some weird sex thing, just your normal early 90s BBS but that didn't stop my mother from losing her mind when she saw the ASCII title banner though.

The first picture I downloaded was a monochrome Batman logo bmp. A few years later someone found a 16 color one of Jenny McCarthy topless from Playboy and spent all night downloading it. We all had to stop by his house on the walk to school to check it out.

Edit It was MajorMud. I found a relatively recent article where a guy researched the BBS some.

3

Edit It was MajorMud. I found a relatively recent article where a guy researched the BBS some.

That was my first one too! They only allowed so many commands per day (100?) unless you paid $15/mo

Later I found the PvP MUDs and ended up playing a custom Godwars variant (Chaosium/Static Chaos) for years. I still know some of the people that I met in that game.

2
lemmy.world

Old enough to know what RealPlayer was. And to use Netscape communicator.

27
lemmy.world

I'm the right age to be in that venn diagram of having had an ICQ account in 1996 and a Snapchat account in 2014.

Where one of my favorite things about the iPhone was that it finally put the nail in the coffin of Macromedia Adobe Flash.

9

Nice. I loved ICQ. A friend of mine had this really cool online friend he made in Sweden (we're in the US) and it was such a feeling of connection then. I miss those days. Nowadays it's like a 50% chance of a snarky/negative interaction with random internet people. The internet used to feel friendlier.

7
lemmy.ca

I remember when the iPhone was “doomed to fail” because it didn’t support flash

3
schnurritoreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Did anyone seriously believe that though? Killing Flash is approximately the only good thing the existence of the iPhone brought to the world.

3
lemmy.ca

The only people at the time who thought it was a good idea were people that liked apple products. Everyone else just complained that the web was 90% flash, so iPads/iPhones are useless.

There was more outrage at lack of flash support than there was from removing optical drives, and people put up quite a stink with that as well.

3
schnurritoreply
discuss.tchncs.de

the web was 90% flash

I remember 2007 well enough that I can definitely say that that was not true in 2007. Flash was widespread, but nowhere near 90%.

1

no, just the fun parts were flash 😭

itch.io doesn't hit the same as newgrounds

2
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Huh. I never heard that. I remember everyone being super stoked that Flash was going to probably die because of the iPhone, and everyone loving it. (I didn't at the time, but I get now why it was Flash that was itself doomed to fail eventually)

2
lemmy.ca

Really?? Damn. It was a huge thing. Got a resurgence after the iPad came out and still didn’t support flash. Was a big circlejerk about it in every tech forum

2

I guess I didn't use those (or many other) forums. I don't remember anyone saying much negative about the iPhone in fact. With a few exceptions like when people pointed out that it didn't initially ship with copy/paste or downloadable apps. Most people overlooked those temporary shortcomings though, because: shiny.

1

I’m the right age to be in that venn diagram of having had an ICQ account in 1996 and a Snapchat account in 2014.

haha upvote

Where one of my favorite things about the iPhone was that it finally put the nail in the coffin of Macromedia Adobe Flash.

fuck you

2
leftzeroreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Netscape? We didn't have Internet when I grew up.

I had to learn from magazines how to configure autoexec.bat to load DOS in high memory, and ask me on boot if whatever game I wanted to run needed extended or expanded memory, and which drivers (mouse, joystick, sound card...) not to load in order to leave enough precious kilobytes of memory available for the game to fit in...

6
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Heh, I got a computer at the end of the DOS era. For all of the things like that, a friend of mine guided me through. You might find it hard to believe but I had to wait 3+ years to even get the Internet at home after getting a computer, so my experience with browsers was mostly at school and a job I got in highschool. At home, I did get secret internet access against my parents' wishes by sharing that same friend's internet account creds and dialing in late at night. If caught, the excuse was always that I'd dialed into that friend's machine to download some files. Technically was true like 1% of the time haha. So yeah I didn't have real Internet access myself either, for a long time.

I remember editing a config/ini file to add the word HIMEM and setting IRQs manually for sound cards and things like that. Not sure I had to do all the steps you mentioned though since our first computer had 24 whole MB of ram. I think most people had 16 (or often 8) at the time!

2

Back then 640KB was supposed to be enough for anyone.

It wasn't.

HIMEM. SYS, if I recall correctly, allowed you to tell DOS to load as much as possible of itself (and maybe even some drivers?) into “high memory” (within the first, and probably last, megabyte, I believe) if it existed and the processor was at least a 286, freeing more of those precious 640KB for programs to run in (DOS by default didn't give them any means of addressing any more memory, even if it existed).

There was also expanded memory (EMS) and, from the 286 on, extended memory (XMS), different, incompatible, methods of addressing memory above that first MB (up to a whopping 8MB with EMS and an absurd 4GB with XMS), and depending on what the program you wanted to run required you had to choose one or the other (which became much easier once the memmaker utility came along).

Then true 32-bit software able to access the whole 4GB address space in 386s and later came along, and all that became ancient history, until we started needing more than 4GB and had to move to 64 bits.

2
Tiralreply
lemmy.world

Oh man, I remember downloading Netscape versions that were probably the sand thing with a different version number. But you're still on dial up so it didn't matter lol. Don't forget downloading more RAM lol

5

Oh yeah -- I cannot remember what that program was called that everyone used for a while that "compressed" or "optimized" RAM usage but there was a feeling (placebo effect, maybe?) that it helped. It may have been something like RAM Optimizer Pro.

2
lemmy.ml

Do you mean Netscape navigator? Or was there another product called communicator?

5
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Sort of. There was a period where they rebranded navigator to come along with an email client also. I remember it being slower and crappier! But I think they stopped updating the original "Navigator" version, at least for a while.

4

Wow, that seems to be the predecessor of SeaMonkey.

It is the continuation of the former Mozilla Application Suite, based on the same source code, which itself grew out of Netscape Communicator and formed the base of Netscape 6 and Netscape 7.

1
lemmy.world

I miss netscape.

I know firefox is basically its codebase successor.. but its not the same.

I just want to go back in time and re-live the magic of the early internet. before search engines. before advertising. before capitalist exploitation.

3
schnurritoreply
discuss.tchncs.de

You could use SeaMonkey if you want a modern Netscape.

"Before search engines" is very early and the problem with that is just that if all you have is links, it's difficult to find anything at all…

I think the Internet of the mid 2000s to early 2010s was the best era. There were amazing new things to discover on it almost every year, people were still using actual communication platforms rather than advertising platforms, it was easy to find out all kinds of interesting facts about the world.

3

Man, websites still spread like wildfire even before search engines.

Word of mouth is a powerful thing.

I remember so many times trading slips of paper with website addresses written on them with others.

2
FE80reply
lemmy.world

before search engines

You must be the one guy pining for webrings.

3

I remember spending a day and a half downloading the Halo 2 trailer to run on RealPlayer. Good times.

4
lemmy.world

RealPlayer still exists and I use it.

I remember when Netscape Navigator came out and it was brilliant, better than mosaic, but slow to load by comparison and we all called it bloatware.

We had internet at work (you could rlogin to different servers and some of them were fast and had internet access), but at home it was pay per minute dial up - check no one is using the phone, dial in, download email via pop3, disconnect.

I wasted hours of my life on irc but nowadays I waste hours of my life on lemmy instead.

3
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

I'm so curious, why do you use RealPlayer? I remember only ever using it because some downloadable videos were in their format. They never struck me as good quality or especially good compression. And the player itself seemed to get worse and more bloated with every update.

1
lemmy.world

Uhhh, if there's a video that you don't want to be held hostage to intrusive ads or buffering during a bad internet connection, realplayer can help with that.

1
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Interesting. So you can watch arbitrary web videos using it? That's so different than how it started!

1

Uhhh, the browser extension offers to download from pretty much any youtube video, but not always all. If there's one that won't download, it's worth trying again after the next realplayer update.

The videos end up in my real player videos folder, from whence I can watch them uninterrupted.

1
reddthat.com

I remember getting in trouble for showing my friend questionable things I found on Newgrounds

18

I studied Film & TV in uni. We had a lecture that covered NewGrounds and YouTube. This was 2018 I think. I used to be an animator myself. Felt pretty good to see it get recognition. This was at University of the Arts London too, so not even a US uni. David Firth and Salad Fingers came up quite a bit, needless to say

4
lemmy.world

We used go to Internet cafes and log onto anonymous chat rooms as a tween group of three. Thought it was HILARIOUS. then eventually got computers in our houses... Dial up.. Rotten.com...etc etc... Funniest time of my life hands down. Big up maddox.xmission articles.👐 Would love to find all the random hilarious videos that made me crack up so much.

18
LaoiseFureply
lemmy.world

Biggest regret : not convincing my parents to let me but bitcoin at 50c... They thought it was bullshit and I didn't know how to. Time machine message.

7

Biggest regret : not convincing my parents to let me but mining bitcoin before silk road because "it's probably some 4chan virus"

4

I had a handful from the late 2000s that I deleted the wallet file to because I thought it was a dumb waste of time

2

There was a seedy building in Memphis with a pretty dingy vibe that looked like a bad strip club. You could go in as a sixteen year old, get a giant extra caffeinated oreo milkshake, and play Tribes all night on the LAN

2
lemmy.world

You think my buddy had internet? We would go over to his house to play DOS games.

16

I spent so much fucking time at my mates dad's cafe caning the rope training mission that I got fucking a 45 minute time.

2

I was doing this with friends as late as 2012, because all of us were poor and couldn't afford those fancy new iphones

16

Being able to text messages and pictures with my long distance GF-now-wife from anywhere was pretty rad, but I think I'd be pretty alright with un-inventing the smartphone.

The evolution of portable pocket computers would have been significantly cooler.

And I miss LAN parties...

2

Ahhh the good old 90s for me... Get together, play games, share information and combos about games. I remember playing Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat, and trying to see who can do all the combos or fatalities while playing on the same computer. I recently find a photo from those times. Feeling a bit nostalgic.

14

Probably every German above a certain age remembers this early 2000s AOL TV spot.

(He recently went into the internet. The site startet loading instantly… That was two days ago… It's still loading… Anyway, he's still young. He isn't in a hurry.)

3
lemy.lol

We got our first computer around 1980, there was no information superhighway then. I also remember before that, when pinball tables were pretty cool.

14
lemmy.world

Typing in the original Goatse URL at somebody's house on their computer

12
lemmy.today

Making it their desktop wallpaper, screenshotting the desktop, setting the desktop to that screenshot, then "hide icons."

11

Or LAN parties so we could all play each other in Warcraft, or party up for a D&D multiplayer adventure together. Good times.

12
lemmy.today

Gathering around the very pre-internet (actually I think pre-windows) computer to play scorched earth.

11
zod000reply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

It wasn't pre-Windows, but it was a DOS game as were most games at the time because they needed more ram or wanted to not run like dogshit. I always felt like Scorched Earth was just "let's make GORILLAS.BAS into an actual game!"

4
Pat_Riotreply
lemmy.today

All I could think of was having to execute it from DOS. It's been a long time. Now I play Worms, lol

2

I'd say that the Worms games aren't just the same game as gorillas.bas, scorthed earth, etc. You could move around, get items, different weapons, all sorts of stuff.

1

I started playing Worms W.M.D. recently. I started on Worms World Party. I was like 7 when it came out. I played Worms 3D and Worms 4 Mayhem too. I still can't believe Worms 3 came out 2003...

3

That's crazy. I had no idea everyone said "look at the computer". Also, I miss being a kid. Growing up in the 90s and 00s was magical time.

11

Some classmates made their own website, and they uploaded embarrassing photos of me, and audio recordings of them prank calling me, and then they shared the URL with the entire class, and gave a presentation of their website in class for extra credit, and the teacher didn't get that I wasn't in on it, and said it's a really cool website, and then everyone laughed, so yeah there was that also.

8
lemmy.ml

I think this would describe people in their mid to late 30s, if they were 10 in the mid to late 90s. Any earlier than that and it would have been bulletin boards and not the web.

7
architectreply
thelemmy.club

I think it depends on when you had access to the Internet. I’m older than that. I know people my age without this experience.

1

Sure, but the meme describes being ten years old while having this experience, and the experience is specifically the World Wide Web, not earlier ways of interacting with the internet. If you are older than 40, you were 10 in 1995 or earlier, a year or two after the first possible time that anyone could access the www. So the specific facts here apply to people aged in their late 30s.

1

We went to each other's houses because we each had a different computer - I had Commodore, one had Apple II, one had a TI-99/4A, etc. We'd work together to type in free games from program listings in magazines, and help find the inevitable typos - learned a LOT from that. Great times, indeed.

8
feddit.it

Im 20 and I did this as well because cheap broadband internet didn't arrive everywhere at the same time

8
lemmy.ca

Playing Elite in the BBC Micro at my friend’s house because the internet didn’t exist.

8

Not as old as my comment would imply! I guess anything pre-internet seems really old to anyone born during its existence.

3

Average amount. My friend had donkey Kong on his Commodore 64, and it was so cool, but we had jet set willy on our spectrum 48k, and a bunch of pokes from computer magazines to give you infinite lives or make you immune to monsters or make them disappear. Happy days.

Our colour chart for JSW was getting dogeared, so one day Dad took it to be colour photocopied and laminated. Legend.

2

Ok, I've been scrolling a while but I finally found a comment that sounds like gibberish to me

I'm '94

EDIT: Ah, I see. UK-specific. I have lots of old stuff around the house from my parents and grandparents. Won't stumble upon this one in Romania unfortunately lol

3

I played Atari 2600 at my friend's house. My parents couldn't afford one--really just didn't want to waste money on another toy I wouldn't play with. Just as well, the arcade games were much better.

5

We used to play Space Invaders after Karate while we were waiting for various parents to pick us up.

If you got one of the high scores, you used the left/right joystick to scroll through the alphabet and the fire button to select.

I couldn't shake the feeling that they called it the Java Development Kit because JDK, who held nine of the ten high scores, ended up working for Sun. We never knew who JDK was, but when Michael moved to our school, he wiped the floor with JDK.

Once, he made the high score table say
YOU
ARE
ALL
LZS
but we threatened to put him permanently in defence for lunchtime footy if he didn't make it say you are all NOT losers. He changed it to
YOU
ARE
NOT
ALL
LZS
which we thought was fair because by his own admission, Colin was a bit of a nerd.

Joke's on us now, though, because Colin the nerd was a late bloomer, dated an ultra pretty goth girl at university who he's still married to, (she's not goth any more) and having weathered the dot com bubble, the credit crunch and the rest and stayed on top, is seriously considering early retirement because he can, and doesn't like the look of what AI is doing to the tech industry. He still makes fun of himself today and winds up his teenage daughters with how badly he uses trendy phrases he ever hears from them or their friends. Great guy.

1

Personal computers came out when I was middle school age. Internet was for my kid's generation? Millennials?

5

The internet was around 8 years away from being common in consumer households when I was 10. If this person is old, I must be positively ancient!

4
lemmy.world

putting scotch tape on their mouse so the ball wouldn't roll 😁 and then when they would look they didn't see the tape and think the mouse was broken 🤣

4
lemmy.world

I had a habit of opening the mouse up to clean the crud off rollers so it would move smoothly again. Would have probably gotten better results from me by just removing the ball so that when I went to check it, it just wasn't there at all.

5

I remember a friend of a friend being the only one anyone knew that had a computer. It was their family computer, but he had games on it, like doom.

No one but him was allowed to touch the computer, but we would still gather around behind him and watch him play doom in absolute awe of it all.

3

10 was the age I got my first own computer. Before that I always used my mother's, so could only use it when she wasn't doing so.

2

Taking turns playing FATE, or later on taking turns in WoW battlegrounds with our Starter Account level 20s, tricked out by months of PvP. Good times :D

2