• kakes@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      I never really thought of it this way before, but we really shifted from calling places to calling people.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        For any kids out there …. If you’re frustrated with your parents always texting to know where you are, can you even imagine parents calling the houses of all your friends to find you?

      • DannyMac@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        My parents would call people they knew depending on the city they were driving through because it wouldn’t be long distance (oh yeah here’s one, the scumbag phone companies would charge you more when you weren’t calling a local number, meaning within the same county/parrish/borough, usually by the minute). They even did this once they had mobile phones! Imagine nowadays contacting someone because you’re going through their city. It’s like, “Hey, I like you, but not enough to see if we can meet up for a little visit just to say hi all because the phone call is cheaper.”

    • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      My grandmother still had the list of her friends’ numbers tacked on the wall next to her telephone stand (which was a little table and chair in the entry way with the house phone, notepad, pencil, and ashtray), and each was a four digit number along with the city name to tell the operator. You’d pick up and wait for the operator – no dialing – and then say ‘Midland 4119’ or whatever, then a person physically connected you.

      By the time I was young, they’d replaced that with dialing, but it was recent enough that she hadn’t taken down her cheat sheet yet.

      • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        That feels too region specific, NYC has had 10 digit dialing since the turn of the century (I believe there was even an episode of Seinfeld explaining it when they wouldn’t give him a 212 area code), while many other areas have had it less than a decade and I believe some rural area areas still allow the local 7 digit.

      • Gestrid@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        Technically, you do still need just the seven numbers if you’re calling locally. The phone system will just assume you’re calling the local area code if you don’t dial one. In my area, it’s pretty easy because the only people who don’t have the local area code (there’s only one even though it’s far from a rural area) are people who moved here and never changed their number.

      • mPony@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        when I was wee we only needed to use 5 digits for many years. The system would assume the first digit you dialed was the final digit of the initial group. When they switched us to the full 7 digits people acted SO annoyed: who’s got that kind of time when you’re using a rotary phone?

        • sramder@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Pffff $10/month was cheaper then a phone line. Scraping together like $100 was a bit harder.

          Being mistaken for a drug dealer… yeah, that never happened ;-)

  • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Games used to come with books to read, and their anti-piracy measure was to give you a page number and tell you to enter the first word on the page to activate the software.

    Of course, you’d copy that floppy and write the code word on the label for your friends.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I miss manuals.

      Used to rip open the shrink wrap with my teeth and pour over the manual in the backseat of the car on the way home when I was a kid.

    • oatscoop@midwest.social
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      8 months ago

      You could copy the manual on a xerox machine. Of course some publishers were smart and printed the manual in such a way it any copies came out as an illegibly dark mess.

      So naturally you took a legitimate manual, manually transcribed it, and made copies of the copy.

    • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      IIRC, it was Greg Norman’s Shark Attack that had a thing where it would give you a small pixel art picture of the top-down view of a golf course, and you had to go through the game manual and enter in what page that golf course picture appeared on… so we just got a photocopy version of the manual

    • Malfeasant@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Lol I had one like that - I made a copy for a friend, but it wasn’t just one code word, it could be any one of about a hundred - but he was dedicated, he figured it out somehow over the course of a few weeks.

  • DjMeas@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    To continue installing a game you had to type in the 7th word found on page 16, paragraph 3 on line 4.

    • jaybone@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I remember the wheel that came with monkey island and test drive 3. I disassembled that shit and made xerox copies, then gave them to my friends.

      • Hildegarde@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Old anti piracy measure.

        Games were on floppies and could be copied trivially. Games also came with a printed instruction manual. If you bought it, you’d have the manual. If you’re just playing a copy you wouldn’t. So type one word from a specific page so we know you own the game.

      • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        Old computers wouldn’t turn themselves off, they had no mechanism to control whether they remained on. Power was controlled by a heavy duty switch on the side of the PC (some manufacturers moved it to the front or something too, but many had it on the side/back).

        When ATX became a thing, power controls were done by a trigger wire from the main board to tell the PSU to turn on fully. This is how things are still done. With 80+ Silver/gold/whatever rated PSUs they actually don’t really turn off anymore, power draw just drops to next to nothing when the system is “off”.

        The hardware switch would physically disconnect the power to the PSU. So when you shut down, this message was displayed, most notably by Windows 9x, to inform you that it had finished the shutdown process and you could flick the switch to turn the power off, and it wouldn’t cause any damage to the system.

    • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Oh man, I still remember when Windows finally powered your computer off when you shut down. My poor Nana spent half an hour trying to turn off my uncle’s computer because she kept hitting the power button just after that showed up (as was tradition) but after the computer transitioned to power off, so it just kept turning on.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      And then, every so often, when the moon was in the right phase and the stars aligned, it would come in perfectly clearly for a few glorious seconds.

  • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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    8 months ago

    Insects. At night there would be plenty of insects under every singe street lamp. The windscreen would be full of yellow goo after driving in summer.

          • Betch@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Yuuup good times. Going places you could only access by car if you crossed a frozen lake or river. Some of my fondest memories as a child. I would never in a million years attempt this today.

            • Asafum@feddit.nl
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              8 months ago

              Yes! That just made me remember a time in highschool over 20 years ago now… We got off the bus and looked over at the bay that was completely frozen and decided to walk over to an island we would always see but never knew what was there. I took a big rock and kept throwing it in front of us to see if the ice cracked

              Tons of bird bones. So many bones… Lol

              • Betch@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Huh! Bird bone island! Sounds nice! Kinda like my backyard by the end of summer.

                My cat likes to leave me mountains of bodies and bones. 🥰

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Not all that long ago, either …… early in my career I worked in downtown Boston, and one of the guys claimed to commute by ice skating down the Charles River. Ok, I’m old for online but not that old

    • DrM@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      Of course the amount of insects drastically reduced, but for the windscreen there is another thing to take into account: Cars today are extremely aerodynamic. Even new Jeeps and the F150s are aerodynamic. Because of this, the insects are pushed away from your windscreen instead of against it, which is one of the main reasons why your windscreen isn’t full of insects anymore.

      The only real exception to this is the Mercedes G-Class, but I doubt that a lot of us will ever sit in one

      Edit: apparently I’m wrong: https://feddit.de/comment/8318194

      • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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        8 months ago

        This is a myth and has been debunked.

        https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/feb/12/car-splatometer-tests-reveal-huge-decline-number-insects

        The survey of insects hitting car windscreens in rural Denmark used data collected every summer from 1997 to 2017 and found an 80% decline in abundance. It also found a parallel decline in the number of swallows and martins, birds that live on insects.

        The second survey, in the UK county of Kent in 2019, examined splats in a grid placed over car registration plates, known as a “splatometer”. This revealed 50% fewer impacts than in 2004. The research included vintage cars up to 70 years old to see if their less aerodynamic shape meant they killed more bugs, but it found that modern cars actually hit slightly more insects.

      • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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        8 months ago

        It realy is.

        I see this kind of realy devastating change in many areas in nature. There used to be frogs in our garden when I grew up, I would listen to them every evening right outside my bedroom window. Now they are gone.

        I see it in the Forests, where huge swats of trees have died over the last couple of years. There are areas in our forests now, that look like war zones, because drouth followed by to much rain in combination with invasive bugs have killed or weakens them so much.

        Going back another generation, my brother, who is 16 years older, told be about field hamsters who where so plentyfull in the fields, that the local kids would earn money by hunting them and turning their corpses in for money in the village center. In the 16 years between my bother and me the European field hamster has, consequently, gone almost extinct. I never have seen one in my life.

        And while all this is by its nature very anecdotal, these are areas where climate change and the way we treat nature as something alien realy feels close to me. And to be honest: It fucking scares me.

        • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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          8 months ago

          Well. Geeze. Scrolling through all the “heehee old tech” posts and now I feel like we’re all sitting around a campfire in something like “The Last of Us” or “Metro 2033” talking about the world that was…

          You sure bring up excellent points though. The world needs to know while there’s still something left to save…

  • CeruleanRuin@lemmings.world
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    8 months ago

    If I wanted to talk to someone who wasn’t in the same location as me, I had to know the ten digit number assigned to them.

  • thechadwick@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Flying being a really fun and nice experience.

    You could walk your family members/friends right to the gate without going through any screening. As a bonus, everyone wore shoes and not their worst clothes too.

    My first flight I was by myself before I was even a teenager yet, and the airline had a specific flight attendant watch after me until my grandparents picked me up on the other side. She was awesome and I kept the flight wings the captain gave me for decades. It was not unusually good customer service.

    In fact, before MBAs McKinsey’d the world, interactions at most businesses were actually pleasant… Nearly every restaurant or store actually cared about customer satisfaction in the before times. I can’t tell you how nice that was having a social contract. It was a genuinely nice thing (*racial and gender provisions apply, offer not valid in all areas) Instead of expanding the umbrella to everyone, we drained the public pools and now it’s normal…

  • IvanOverdrive@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    I love how the title is “Tell me what it means” and then 747 replies later, no one has done that.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This station now concludes its broadcast day.

    That’s right. At a certain time of night, TV stations would just stop showing things until morning.

    • darth_tiktaalik@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      I feel like even the concept of a tv station is a bit outdated despite technically still existing.

      “Entertainment companies used to decide what shows were playing at 5pm”