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gervase | 6 years ago

> PCs made a lot of fast progress until sometime in the 90s and then things stagnated.

Transistor densities increased 2 orders of magnitude (~100x) between 1995 and 2005. Integer operations were a little less, maybe 1.5 oom, over the same period. When you say that PCs stagnated over that period, in what context did you mean?

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Ididntdothis|6 years ago

They didn’t become much more useful. I mean that in the same sense that a car from 1950 and a car from today are not that much different. Yes the modern car is much better but the big jump was to be able to move from one point to another quickly which was achieved with cars from 1950 or earlier. Same for cell phones. Having a 3G connection and GPS was a huge step but since then I don’t see much revolutionary change.

nostrademons|6 years ago

I get your point, but Amazon, Google, Netflix, zillions of web forums, Facebook, AirBnB, Craigslist, Google Maps, NextDoor, DoorDash, Google Photos, all the messaging apps, and many other services all post-date 1995. In terms of how I live vs. how my parents lived, basically all the major changes are because of the Internet, and most happened in the last 15 years.

apatheticonion|6 years ago

I don't know, dude. The computer in my pocket changed my life pretty significantly. Don't forget that right now we are teaching cars how to drive themselves. Soon internet will soon be shot at us from satellites in orbit which were put there by rockets which had computers powerful enough guide them to land.

dTal|6 years ago

A 1995 laptop would have been incredible sci-fi future-tech in 1975. A 2015 laptop, on the other hand, is bascially just a thinner, faster, lighter version of the 1995 one. It doesn't even do much more - surf the internet, write documents, play games. If you're patient and determined, a late 90s machine could even service you today.

There's definitely a sense in which the 90s marks the beginning of the era of the recognizably "modern" computer. The oldest computer you can run Linux on will be from the 90s. GUIs settled in the 90s - you can make a modern machine look like Windows 95 with nothing more than a desktop theme.

Maybe "matured" is a better word than "stagnated".