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dansalvato | 1 year ago
Most of the novelty has evaporated since every device nowadays can do everything imaginable (and if not locally, then via cloud). On old computers, it's just cool to see different kinds of software and games running on it. It makes you want to explore the possibilities. People used to be enthusiastic about the cool stuff their computer could do.
For a while now, I've wanted to set up a retro computer as a "daily driver" of sorts. It feels like a lot of our everyday uses for technology have not changed much over the decades—communication, news, entertainment, writing, organization, etc. If I lean back and ask myself what I actually use a computer for (other than specific stuff for work), I find it kind of hard to answer the question, which likely means I'm wasting a lot of time doing things that aren't deliberate or meaningful.
I love retro computers (especially Amiga), and doing stuff on them will always fill me with enthusiasm.
nehal3m|1 year ago
Every once in a while I'll switch everything over to FOSS (laptop, phone) and dead simple devices (Casio watch, paper calendar). It's much more fun, maybe because of the jank Linux is still plagued by sometimes rather than in spite of it.
teddyh|1 year ago
You can’t do that anymore. Most everything everybody does on a “computer” nowadays is all through a Google browser using effectively proprietary protocols. Yes, you could edit your own documents and organize your own information, but the second you want to involve someone else, you’re stuck. You can’t accept an invite from somebody else to a Google document, nor can you share your spreadsheet with somebody else. You can’t even participate in online Teams or Zoom meetings. People you talk to and want to collaborate with don’t know what files are.
tigerlily|1 year ago
boerseth|1 year ago