Limewire.

  • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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    28 minutes ago

    Orbitz, a novelty beverage with little floaty gummy spheres

    Tasted terrible, looked disgusting but I loved the look, texture and sensation. Haven’t found anything yet that matches

    • MochiGoesMeow@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      Especially in our current timeline. My alcoholic tendencies are at an all time high. Sigh.

      But damn it feels better than being sober and seeing the idiotic timeline come to pass.

      I felt this one in my bones.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      46 minutes ago

      I loved those things when I was a kid. So much fun to throw. We also had metal horse shoes

  • Nyticus@kbin.melroy.org
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    23 hours ago

    1990s internet. Yeah it had to start somewhere and a lot of them were butt-ugly for design. Now 2000s internet up until roughly 2009, that’s the shit.

    • slaneesh_is_right@lemmy.org
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      2 hours ago

      I always thought whatever generation comes next will have it so good, because the i ternet is fast and well developed and shit. But no, the internet actually peaked in 2000. With all the ads now, it’s barely usable anymore. Does anyone remember when you would go to a website and not immediately click it away because it’s just a clickbait ad filled minefield?

      • untorquer@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        I remember websites having links to other websites that weren’t really affiliated and that being as effective as an searches. You clicked through the internet like it was a file folder system managed by thousands of html authors playing the telephone game.

        • Rose@slrpnk.net
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          1 hour ago

          Ooh! Remember what was the original premise of Google’s PageRank? A site was classified as more valuable if other sites linked to it. …I have no idea exactly what they do nowadays, because clearly search engines have every reason to be suspicious of people linking to other sites.

          • untorquer@lemmy.world
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            50 minutes ago

            Haha ahhh pre-enshitified internet was so good. Anonymity through obscurity ig.

            Not sure i’m particularly concerned what most search provides consider “suspicious” these days.

      • Nyticus@kbin.melroy.org
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        1 hour ago

        There’s a split opinion on when exactly the internet peaked at. You’ll have some people say 2007, others will say 2009 and then there’s those who’ll even say mid-2000s like 2005. My personal opinion is that I think it peaked at 2007. Social Media was fairly at its infancy with Reddit, YouTube, Facebook, MySpace all a few years old each by that point. Cell phone technology was still primarily 3G. The Messenger Era was at its peak but was also starting to steadily go downhill.

        2009 was actually when the internet started to corrode and it began with Facebook acquiring FriendFeed and that cracked open the idea that corporations could take control of the open web, which they eventually try and do as the years followed.

  • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Life before cellphones and internet.

    Did you know in 1990 only .25% of the world’s population (12.5 million) had cellphones and only .05% (2.8 million) had internet?

    It feels like we sacrificed local community and connection for global information overload and disconnection sometimes.

    • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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      16 hours ago

      in 1990… only .05% (2.8 million) had internet?

      In 1990, the World Wide Web wasn’t even available outside of CERN/university usage yet. That didn’t become widely available to the public until 1993, and the first ISP would have only been established a year prior, in 1989.

      This, to me, is like saying originally that only Edison had light bulbs in January of 1880.

      • ILikeTraaaains@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Internet is the interconnected networks and WWW is the open system of interconnected pages that that can be accessed through internet.

        Before WWW you had online portals and BBS.

        Its is more like saying that cars existed and were used before of the production of the Ford Model T.

    • VacuumVigilante@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      GenX, here. You are so very, very wrong. Phones and internet have made anxiety disorders endemic. We’re constantly bombarded with information, alerts, opinions, information and misinformation…

      Young people have never experienced what it’s like to have privacy. To leave the house and be totally unreachable. To get answering machine messages that you had no obligation to immediately respond to.

      I’m in big tech and helped develop all this shit. We made it addictive on purpose. I’d love to go back to how things were in the 90s, and I’m not waxing nostalgic. Things were objectively better before all this crap.

      • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        2 hours ago

        I’m a millennial who’s old enough to remember those days. It’s an absolutely huge difference, though at least if you’re expecting a phone call, you don’t have to scuttle your whole day sitting by the landline.

      • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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        21 hours ago

        Maybe I am, but I don’t think so. I’m a Xennial and also workin tech. You and I feel the same but I don’t think we’re in the majority. It might not be 90% but I think we are the ever shrinking minority that feels this way.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      In 1990 my father negotiated a new contract for himself, with IBM. He’s a computer programmer consultant that can program in 72 languages including Cobol and Lisp.

      The one thing he absolutely insisted upon was that he wouldn’t have to carry a pager. He still refuses to carry a cell phone.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        17 hours ago

        The one thing he absolutely insisted upon was that he wouldn’t have to carry a pager. He still refuses to carry a cell phone.

        I’ve recently started a new job, and it’s the first I was unable to negotiate no pager, but I was a ‘motivated applicant’.

        Wow, does it suck. This is also the LAST job I will have with an expectation of interrupted sleep and never-fucking-ending weekend bullshit. I will frame it as a reliability/change-control question that if after-hours changes are required, then the customer has a broken H.A set-up.

  • son_named_bort@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    A buddy of mine owned a video game store that I worked at for a bit. The pay was crappy and the hours were unstable and random, but I do miss working there.

    • slaneesh_is_right@lemmy.org
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      2 hours ago

      I do miss stores like that. We had so many random stores like video games, comic book stores, record stores and things like that. Even then, they wouldn’t get rich there, but they at least seemed passionate about what they sold and their store was also kind of a hangout spot. Now rent has gone up like crazy and they got replaced by apple stores and other garbage shops.

    • Libra00@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I worked at a dial-up ISP in the late 1990s and it was the most enjoyable job I’ve ever had (it also helped considerably that we could smoke inside). Sadly it paid really poorly and they weren’t willing to make me full-time because of budgetary concerns, so I was ultimately forced to take a job that paid double and had great benefits but that I hated.

    • naticus@lemmy.world
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      24 hours ago

      As a teen, I worked at a restaurant as a cook. The pay was terrible, the hours were unforgiving, the amount of cuts, bruises, and burns I got deserved hazard pay, and my coworkers were overly dramatic backstabbers. Liked the cooking and getting through a huge rush of customers, loved that when I left for the day my responsibilities and thoughts about work were behind me.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        29 minutes ago

        Yeah, I can see this. My analogy was working in a campus dining hall. Everyone else hated working dish room but I loved it. So satisfying to keep up with a lunch rush, feed the machine as fast as people got done eating.

        The floor was always covered with slime and water, but once I learned to walk on it, I could walk on anything without slipping for years after. It was noisy and hectic and rushed, but we could skate in with a huge cart of dishes and gave the satisfaction of turning into clean dishes and going back out almost as fast. Speed was paramount so even if you dumped a cart of hundreds of dishes, that’s just teasing, clean it up and work even faster to catch up again. FOOD FIGHTS! Every day someone would start a food fight in the dishroom, but since we were all covered in mess anyway no one cared. I remember it as a fun break from studying, with side effects for great balance and handling slippery floors. I imagine my roommate remembers a lot more stench on me and my clothes than I ever noticed, and I’m sure it would have been a horrible job if it lasted longer or if I had to work more hours.

      • Libra00@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        I worked at a fast food joint in the early 90s where often I was the only person running the kitchen during lunch rush because we were understaffed. It was hectic and utterly batshit and the pay was minimum wage, but those times when we were super busy I felt like a goddamned superhero because I would just get into the zone and be the eye of the hurricane managing the chaos with grace and elegance. It felt so damned good during but especially after. It was a shit job and I was glad to move on to something better, but it had its moments.

        • naticus@lemmy.world
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          21 hours ago

          Right?! I totally understand that. The place I worked at was a diner, and weekend breakfast rush was always insane. Would go through hundreds of eggs in a single shift to the point the grill would actually cool off if we went through them too fast. We’d always get a few stacks out and ready for whoever was on the grill, because that was the one position that you had no time to do anything except attend to what’s in front of you. But if we went to fast, we’d be using eggs that came straight from the fridge. I loved being on egg grill duty because I had only one job, no other responsibilities, people brought things to you, and I was damn good at it.