• emeralddawn45@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    31 minutes ago

    I grew up with nearly every stage and major leap of our modern tech. I saw dialup internet and windows 95 and the major shift to XP. I had an original Nintendo and gameboy, and got to witness the evolution to handheld and 3D gaming. I had a flip phone with T9 texting, and saw the first smartphones come about. For me, tech peaked in like 2012, and hasn’t done anything worthwhile or innovative since, with the exception of the steamdeck. The internet has only gotten shittier since, cell phones and PCs have only gotten more expensive and complex, without any major increase in capability. Sure they’re more powerful, but they can’t really do anything new, and all software has only gotten shittier and less efficient. It’s honestly depressing to think about how much hope I had for the tech space in the 2000s and how far we’ve fallen since then.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Everything modern also says you don’t own it, only lease access that can be revoked at any time, and also serves you tons of ads while listening to and spying on everything you do.

      But anytime anyone says anything unkind towards the god of technology, they are amish, luddites, fools, etc.

  • arthurpizza@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    The Luddites got a bad rap. They weren’t anti-technology. They just knew that the technology was being used to push their wages down and make their hours longer.

    Ned Ludd knew that smashing the machines was sometimes the best option!

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      Yeah, after I learned about his movement, I stopped using the term as a pejorative. They were’ pretty based.

      A lot of the machinery was also dangerous AF.

  • magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    15 hours ago

    The only technology developed after 2021 was LLM’s and Stable Diffusion

    This is the understanding of a “tech enthusiast”, not someone who’s actually interested in how computers work.

  • Bread@thelemmy.club
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    16 hours ago

    Thats a bad way of describing enshitification. Yeah people are not interested in buying stuff they already had but for a monthly subscription. That’s literally the only idea anyone in tech has had this decade. Do the same thing for a subscription and slap AI all over it. Get series A funding and sell the company.

  • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I like technology (mostly pre-2010), but I think there’s been a philosophical shift in the things that modern tech companies prioritize. AI is a huge part of the problem obviously, but it’s more of a symptom than a cause.

    I want something that I can repair and modify. I want the internals to be easy to access and made out of parts cheap enough for me to replace. I want to be able to play pretend like I’m Terry Davis and not have to deal with UEFI bullshit telling me what I can and can’t run on my computer.

    It’s all a move to walled gardens with very limited access to the OS or hardware, where the focus is on touch screens and amplified UIs. I’m the kind of person who customized Xmonad and Vimperator (RIP, I know there are dupes but it’s not the same) to never even bother with a mouse, and so it all feels unnatural. I spend so much time fighting my autocorrect when I’m on windows or Mac products, another one of those “helpful” features that is forced and obnoxious.

    It’s a move from computers as toy (LEGO set) to computers as toy (needoh squishy). They’ve become machines designed to deliver content and extract data while you zone out. Some of the most fucking fun I’ve had in my life has been spending 6 hours writing PERL to do something I probably could have done manually in 30 minutes or strange journeys into the windows registry as I try to figure out why all of my / changed into ¥, and that’s just not the vibe of anything in modern technology. Everything is designed to hide as much of itself from you.

  • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    Make it 1994 and I’m fine with it. Couldn’t care less. I’d trade it all to be back in 1994.

    • psilotop@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago
      1. Sooooo many great games and movies released then, and the 90s left a great catalog of both.

      Edit: I started my comment with “2001” but it only says “1.” When I view it? Maybe a bug in my client.

      • diaphragmwp@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 hours ago

        {number}{dot} is a Markdown list. Like this:

        1. one
        2. two

        The original Markdown was poorly documented (including in this regard), but most derivatives specify that the numbers are ignored and it just counts from one. Annoying when you are trying to count from zero.

    • Pzulu@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      I take it as a “fixed” reference. Many people know the Amish community hit a point and chose not to use new technology created after that.

      They are not against it, or others using it.

      I don’t interpret the phrase as having malace, just a way to show this might be the new line in the sand.

      Amish 2.0 ?

    • Tiral@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I guess if you consider the word “Amish” to be negative? I mean I despise Amish because of how they treat their animals, but I don’t consider it negative. I’d assume most people don’t.

    • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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      15 hours ago

      Yeah it’s not really a bad thing if you’re about it. Religious aspects aside the (general, it varies) Amish approach to technology is that each thing is looked at very intentionally with community integrity in mind. Instead of everything for everyone, technology is considered a tool.

      Most people don’t get cell phones to scroll tik tok slop, but they might let a business owner have one with a limited plan for planning jobs for their business.

      Most people don’t get cars because they encourage people to live farther apart and are expensive, but they might allow solar charged e-scooters