Early internet 2000-2011ish.
Physical buttons.
Watching sports without a subscription.
Keebler pizzeria chips.
The News.
Physical media.
Video games releasing finished without a day one patch.
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Early internet 2000-2011ish.
Physical buttons.
Watching sports without a subscription.
Keebler pizzeria chips.
The News.
Physical media.
Video games releasing finished without a day one patch.
Netflix 2013 had basically everything for 8 dollars. What an experience that was.
I guess I knew it couldn't last if it got super popular. It would have to get filled with ads or you'd be charged per show or movie you watched, I thought.
But for a brief window you had the perfect application for watching tv and movies.
There's a lot of people here reminiscing about how it used to be a better world. It wasn't, but we weren't aware of all the horrible hidden shit going on, or we felt less affected/responsible because it was a less connected world back then. Sometimes I miss my ignorance, but ignorance won't fix the world.
So I guess I miss pulp novels.
Ah 24/7 Walmart, that's how I bought my first stuff for experimenting with femininity, waiting until 2am and going a town over to ensure nobody I knew saw me…
And to answer your question the wild west internet. There was freedom and rebellion there. A whole new world with every weirdo, freak, and nerd at your fingertips. A place where you weren't alone until you found a person who could recommend a place, but instead you could just look it up and find out where your kind of freaks were chatting and they'd even tell you if there was a place irl. Ironically I'm noticing a shift back to needing to know a person to find a place, but that place is a discord server more often these days.
Knees that didn't crack.
For me: the internet. The internet has done what my country has done and that's centralization. Collecting everybody in a few big cities and subsequently killed small villages, towns and communities. Ironically, in the case of my government, it was done to save money and in the case of the internet, it was done to make money.
I also enjoyed my time during the years I was taking my degree. The friendships and fun hangouts, the way we helped one another and accepted one another and learned tolerance and humility. I remember that I actively participated in as many things as possible while I was studying, because I wanted as few regrets as possible when I graduated and the next phase of life started. I'm so happy I had the pressence of mind to think of that and take advantage of my time with these people while I still had the chance, because this current phase of life is a lot more slow paced and there isn't much in terms of socializing because everyone is working and are making babies these years. I don't mind that those years ended and that we are here now. It was good while it lasted, but I do think that if it had lasted any longer than it did, it would probably have gone stale at some point. We ended on a high note.
Oh, and since last year, my spouse and I have been returning to physical media and have started buying and borrowing DVDs and Blurays again. Recently we watched a 2004 movie that has a scene in a DVD store and I just blurted out to my boyfriend that I miss going to one of those stores and browsing DVDs. Especially Blockbuster-type stores where you'd rent the DVD because they always had a bin with discarded films you could buy for super cheap. These days most of our DVD purchases take place online and it's so boring. I miss going to a physical store with atmosphere and find some random movie I hadn't seen before and it was almost free, it was that cheap. Axel Music and Moby Disc were my favourite stores and I totally took that experience for granted because silly me thought that stores like that would always be around. The closest I get to reliving this experience is when we go to the library to borrow movies. The DVD section is shoved away in a sad little corner in my library so it's not really the same, but it's still better than nothing at all. I don't know what I'll do if physical media is forcefully phased out after the boomer generation passes away. Dx
On the other hand, LPs have made a comeback so maybe there is hope yet.
You can still have that DVD experience by going to thrift stores. Most of them have a decent collection.
Should probably check out some of my local ones and see what they have. Thanks for your comment! 🤗
Browsing the internet. You occasionally might find a malicious site but overall it was safer though more diversified. Now, I literally have a dozen sites I go to regularly because browsing online can be hazardous as hell.
Rights to Digital Privacy
Weeping upvote for Firefly, taken too soon 😭 🪦 😭 😭
Why do the worst people make such good shows
A Dollar Tree opened near me in Canada within the last year. Now don't get me wrong, our local Dollarama isn't amazing or anything, but that Dollar Tree is embarrassingly bad by comparison. 75% of a shelves were just straight up empty, and what was actually on the shelves was so cheaply made that I'd be embarrassed to give it away, let alone charge what they were trying to charge for it.
There was one aisle pretty well stocked though. They had an entire aisle dedicated exclusively to bibles. What the actual fuck?
The climate.
The pre-algorithm internet and social media era of about 2000-2014.
I remember when Instagram was just pictures of my friends cats, hikes, and thrift finds. It was great and fun.
When Facebook status windows automatically had an “is” following your name. So posts would start with “Mary is” and you’d fill in what you’re doing or how you’re feeling.
When Twitter used SMS and you could use it just to follow your favorite band, so whenever they posted it felt like you got a text from them. That was pretty cool.
When one still could have the reasonable impression that everyone is the same before the law.
When was that?
Zebra Stripe gum
The candle that burns brightly fades quickly
Usenet.
Nintendo after the GameCube dropped. Getting demolished by Sony letting basically any third party go nuts with what seemed like zero curation made them follow suit. Granted, they were a bit obnoxious about it… but the shift in quality even for their own IPs was huge.
TIL that Walmart aren't open 24hrs anymore. I thought it switched back after COVID, but I guess not.
I haven't tried visiting a Walmart after 7pm in a very long time.
I think the covid thing happening was their excuse to seize doing that. They were 24/7 right around that period. But I could also see other reasons why they stopped. I mean, overnights were poorly staffed and it's wal-mart, everyone is going to be getting away with tons of shit like stealing and customers getting rowdy.
Personally, as an overnight worker, I'm glad it ended. I miss being able to shop peacefully but, better safe than convenient.
It probably got expensive to keep all those overnight workers to handle the few customers they had. And those that are still left, and stocking the shelves for the next day, will be replaced by robotic stockers before too long.
90s and early 2000s gaming
The glory days when every tech generation felt like a rocket-powered slingshot into the future.
Yeah, I miss it too
The glory days when every tech generation felt like a rocket-powered slingshot into the future.
“Graphics can’t possibly get any better than this!” —Me about the N64
Censorship being taboo.
It's funny to me to see people mythologize how perfect video games were before they could be remotely updated.
Sure, game developers rely on fix-it-later updates much more than they should today, but games had bugs back then too.
It’s not mythology, testing was crucial so you wouldn’t ship a broken cartridge, which was very costly than a patch download. It made financial sense to test throughly, and more than that, develop carefully.
I think the only guys that made a working game in a week were Atari VCS developers, and IMO it wa a combination of the limited hardware, and the skill of a few legendary programmers.
Today we get games that dwarf the entire software stack of computers decades ago, but they’re made loosely, knowing they’ll ship broken and need patch after patch until it doesn’t make financial sense, and then they’re abandoned.
My most recent experience is Fallout 76 on Steam, and by god it is a bag of bugs despite being the bread winner of the franchise. For example, a long-standing bug is that once it starts, and offers to press any button to sign in, you have to wait about a minute before doing that, otherwise it will likely hang. This has existed since launch, and after numerous patches it hasn’t been addressed yet.
The crazy part is that it's only mildly inconvenient now compared to the spray glued collection of game breaking bugs and horrendous design choices it was at launch.
And yes, I'm an old timey gamer who's also a masochist playing it nightly.
Stupid sexy Fasnacht!
Restaurants and stores that weren’t chains
plenty of those around if you live in a city. i grew up in a rural/suburban area and even in the 90s there was nothing but chain restaurants apart from some crappy pub or pizza place in the town center.
Minidiscs. More durable than CDs. They just looked cool. Sounded way better than cassettes and easier to record and modify tracks. If the data drives were easier to acquire (i.e. like a CD drive) I think they could've taken off.
They were super popular for production, but not for listening for consumers.
Online dating back when it was something normal people were embarrassed to do.
Online dating when sites didn't conspire to keep you single.