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johnzim | 2 years ago
After reading the article through I was struck by the tone. It was a breath of fresh air - so optimistic and enthusiastic and not in the least bit self-important or unduly serious. It made me excited to read more!
When I saw the '(2009)' flag I suddenly felt a pang of grief. Whatever happened to that infectious, enthusiastic incarnation of wired magazine?
afavour|2 years ago
I assume it didn’t make money. I have fond memories of reading PC magazines front to back in the 90s but they’re all gone now. The audience has gone online, to a hundred different blogs or YouTube channels or whatever.
hnuser123456|2 years ago
katzenversteher|2 years ago
Now I sometimes still go to such bookstores but those magazines have lost their appeal since I can get all of the information from the internet, sometimes even on the website of the magazine. It's unfortunately also quite overwhelming.
milsorgen|2 years ago
khazhoux|2 years ago
And not just Wired. It seems everything was more optimistic and exciting 10 years before whenever you’re reading this comment.
jfengel|2 years ago
https://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/28/business/greenspan-foreca...
In the 1990s, Wired was not merely "infectious and enthusiastic". It was gullibly gung-ho, and ugly as hell. I used a heuristic: if something appeared on the cover of Wired, it was either a fait accompli, or going to fail within a year.
So yeah, 1990s Wired was genuinely different. But often not in a good way.
firebat45|2 years ago
noman-land|2 years ago
I reckon it was Conde Nast.
jrmg|2 years ago