Shit that reminds you that you’re getting old - Re: Fwd: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Fwd: Damn young’uns

We are closer to the year 2042 than the year 1992. To put that in perspective remember the time capsule nickelodeon buried in 1992?

The nickelodeon time capsule originally buried in Orlando Florida was buried 30 years ago and will be opened in 20.

Also its original location in Orlando aka the nickelodeon studio is gone, and it's been gone for 16 years.
 
Probably the fact that all of my memories of early Internet are in no more than 240p. Then there was the first time I heard Blink-182 on a local 'Classic Rock' radio station.

Though perhaps the worst is the fact that I can say "I was there" when Little Caesar's began their whole Hot N' Ready Pizza thing.
(It was in 2001, btw. Welcome to the old folks home.)
 
We are closer to the year 2042 than the year 1992. To put that in perspective remember the time capsule nickelodeon buried in 1992?

The nickelodeon time capsule originally buried in Orlando Florida was buried 30 years ago and will be opened in 20.

Also its original location in Orlando aka the nickelodeon studio is gone, and it's been gone for 16 years.
I remember watching this, haven’t thought about it since then.

Poor fucking kid, not like they’d thought we’d have solar system travel and a host of nice things on earth. Instead of a plague and so much disinformation that the only real thing is the bottles in the liquor cabinet
 
While I grudgingly acknowledge the passage of time, shall never acknowledge growing old.

I note the passage of time largely by reading obituaries of people I knew or knew of. 50th high school reunion is this summer, many I went to school with pushing up daisies, some for decades. Haven't attended a single reunion, see no reason to go a couple of thousand miles to hang with a bunch of old people I have literally nothing in common with.

The body ages, but inside I still feel much like a little kid. Wearing the Gumby sweatshirt today, a favorite. 👍
I'm the same fucking way, if not as old or wise.

"Oh shit, Age of Empires 2 got another update. What fucking reality is this?"
 
Running into adults at were born after 9/11. It took me back as I remember trading stories with other guys while I was active duty and a common question was "where were you stationed and what were you doing on 9/11?". Usually people back then had interesting stories like readying mothballed equipment that was sealed up right after the Gulf war or being issued some relic like a WW2 era M2 Heavy machinegun and post out at the maingate on an overwatch position. Most guys in the military must have been babies or not even born yet on 9/11 these days.
 
A friend of mine is traveling for a while to an area where internet is spotty at best and video streaming is out of the question, so I helped him stuff an SD card with tons of movies and tv shows. I made a throwaway statement that what's on that tiny card I can balance on my fingertip is magnitudes more than the massive video collection he used to have. (he was a pirate and media hoarder of the first hour)This lead us both to be quiet for a moment and gave us both a small sad.

I sometimes find myself stopping and marveling what absolute scifi technology has become everyday. Stuff I and many others didn't even ever consider seriously possible inside my lifetime the time I got my first computer. I mean some of the signs were there and just a mere decade later it was pretty clear that is the way it was going but still, wow, sometimes. late-80s me time-traveling to today would've his mind blown perpetually and probably wouldn't sleep for weeks out of excitement and having to figure it all out. He'd also especially have his mind blown to what electrical engineering is today. I also don't think he'd understand why I still hold on to the computer he bought a few years ago when all these marvels exist.

Yet, I live in this time and in a way it's all mundane. Super computer in my phone, mundane. Instant global communication from wherever with whomever, mundane. Loads of information and basically endless entertainment and educational media mouseclicks away, from 80s blockbuster to how to install wainscoting DIY videos to some random guy's 4k youtube video of walking the streets of Tokyo, mundane. It's weird. Sometimes I wish I could see this world through these fresh eyes. Sometimes I also can't help but wonder how healthy all of this is. It feels like some wrongful excess that shouldn't be, at the same time I'm pretty sure young people nowadays don't and can't understand how I could feel that way.
 
Running into adults at were born after 9/11.
I've experienced something similar with the fall of the Berlin Wall. On one occasion that a peer of mine discussed it with me, she commented how the younger generations and the students she teaches don't fully realize or understand the significance and importance of that event because they were born after Germany reunified.
 
-People buying the equivalent of store receipts about bored apes.
-Smartphones. Smartphones everywhere.
-"There was a phone booth here once upon a time..."
-Every single TikTok trend
-Legs and back every night after work. Every.
-The world dividing itself into wojacks, nordic gamers, and chad/virgin dichotomies
-Actually owning games almost dead
-Physical media almost dead
 
that was literally over 30 years ago
When you realize "30 years ago" isn't in the 1970s or 1980s anymore.

"There was a phone booth here once upon a time..."
"Oh look, a payphone. It likely doesn't work. Yep, it's down."

-Every single TikTok trend
- How things like "TikTok" or "Instagram" or "social media culture" in general feels like a freakish new trend.
 
- When you realize there'll soon be people born who know nothing of a internet without Facebook.
I can still remember when the Internet itself was a novelty in the late '90s.

(Simpsons episodes from around then poked fun at the internet a lot, like that good school at Globex having a studynet.edu site.)
 
I was shopping the other day and I saw a kids play set that included a phone, it wasn't the rotary phone in the playset I had as a kid it wasn't even a touch tone it was a wooden block with icons on it.

Sometimes I also can't help but wonder how healthy all of this is. It feels like some wrongful excess that shouldn't be, at the same time I'm pretty sure young people nowadays don't and can't understand how I could feel that way.

I don't think it's healthy and I'm seeing more and more people seeking out alternatives to computers for everything, I'm seeing bidding wars going on for typewriters, writing paper sales going through the roof for quality notebooks and pens, I'm also seeing more Film Photography happening not just instant photography but genuine interest in very technical photography, film sales are going up as well much like typewriter ribbons and correction tabs.

I think the internet was one of Humanities greatest inventions and also one of it's biggest follies when it came to it's application and it's consolidation into being controlled by a few large corporations with there own interests, not all of them beneficial to society or culture.

I'm glad to say I'm not reliant on digital technology, I'll use it as it would be churlish not to but if I had to I could close my laptop, power off the phone, and disconnect my router and I'd be able to exist indefinitely when it comes to knowledge and entertainment.

I've experienced something similar with the fall of the Berlin Wall. On one occasion that a peer of mine discussed it with me, she commented how the younger generations and the students she teaches don't fully realize or understand the significance and importance of that event because they were born after Germany reunified.

I rember the wall falling as I saw a kid and saw it on TV and my mum running to the phone to call my dad and other family about it and being really excited, a lot of people my age (mid 30's) know it happened but tend not to realise why it was so significant.

I'm starting to see that happen with 911 and kids born just before or just after, it's kinda shocking to be honest I can recall exactly where I was when I found out what was happening half the world away and all the miss information and using my portable FM radio to listen to the news on the bus on the way home, and trying to talk to friend of mine on ICQ in the US to see if they where alright.

"Oh look, a payphone. It likely doesn't work. Yep, it's down."

I've had that happen to me lately, they are getting turned into cash machines, or some other civic infrastructure some of them are getting turned into those Defibrillator stations.

- How things like "TikTok" or "Instagram" or "social media culture" in general feels like a freakish new trend.

Yea that bug's me, the first time I encountered anything like social media was a Swedish company called Communities, it was like old school Facebook 10 years before Facebook it was interesting but I couldn't see the value in it. I stuck to forums on single topics and I miss the fact they are starting to fade away.

I can still remember when the Internet itself was a novelty in the late '90s.

(Simpsons episodes from around then poked fun at the internet a lot, like that good school at Globex having a studynet.edu site.)

Yea, I've had access to the internet since before it was the internet - my dad had access through work and I can still recall playing MUDS and network doom, then the dotcom boom and all the cool interesting little websites that are now lost to time.

I recall the first internet joke I got and it was a Simpsons episode as well.
 
One of the things I distinctly remember was going onto an old Google group that was talking about wrestling back in 1999 and someone posted bitching about The Rock and ended it with

"The rock says, The Rock says, I REALLY SUCK!"

lol kinda funny to see in hindsight people bitching about guys who became legends
 
My brother is married with a kid on the way, my other brother is engaged to a black(Italian) girl. Meanwhile I haven’t had a date in 3 years and am thinking of chasing after higher education.

I’m the youngest by more than half a decade. They really exposed me to everything I like. I’ve always liked shit that everyone in my age group didn’t like because my parents couldn’t afford toys after me and my two sisters.

I’ve always felt like an odd one out, but now I feel bad old and jealous.
 
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