Tech you miss/ new tech trends you hate - ok boomers

So eventually phone calls could be killed off entirely because of scammers?

Maybe future "smartphones" could be like tablets that can do texting or video conferencing, but not calls?

(then again scammers could find a way to thoroughly ruin alternatives to calling like they did with calls)
Lets see my work phone is flooded with SMS spam messages from email addresses the phones my work issues do not let you block email addresses, at one point russians would flood your (g)mail with calendar invites that you could not cancel causing your phone to go off at like 1 or 2 AM (my time).
How the fuck you work in an electronics store & not know what the fuck a SPDT switch is?
Because big box stores do not care about what the employee knows, they only care about getting cheap labor and that the employee will say what ever the company wants them to no matter how wrong it is.

Back in like 2009 or 2010 I had a Best Buy employee tell me "Oh processor speed is not important any more because of duel cores". When I asked them what the processor speed was of a laptop my then gf was looking at.

In the US you have Micro Center as the exception to that, but in lucky there is 1 in my state, and even more lucky that its not that far away. Most states do not have one.
 
There exist services that attempt to weed out these kind of calls. Not sure about their effectiveness though. I have noticed within the past year I've been getting way more scam calls than ever. Did call centers get a boost from lockdown bs?
Empirically, it seems landlines are getting deluged with scam calls while mobile providers seem to be doing a better job weeding them out with the new STIR/SHAKEN thing that got implemented.

When I converted my long time job to a permanent work from home one. I ported the office number to a cell phone. Prior to that, the number as a landline was getting all sorts of scam/telemarketer calls. Since the number became mobile, the number of scam calls has dropped by approximately 60% and some of those that still get through are being flagged with "Suspicious" or "Scam Call".

As a more direct answer to your question, I'd suspect that scammers are taking advantage of the fact more people are home now (out of work, working from home, etc.) that they've increased their efforts to contact and scam as many people as possible.

When I last upgraded my phone, I went about a week before remembering to shut off background data usage for all the apps. Everything was sucking down a ridiculous amount of data, even the fucking calculator.
The aforementioned porting to a cell phone resulted in the phone complaining when I turned off mobile data that had been switched on as default. I don't use the phone for video calls or mobile web browsing so I don't need to burn through my monthly data like it wished I would.

I know because I append postfixes (e.g. (actual account)+ebay) and the spam mails always contain them too. Makes such stuff easy to track and block without having to set up 9 proxies and 20 email addresses.
I do the same thing because it's easier to delete or /dev/null a compromised post-fix or forward-only alias and replace it than it is to delete an e-mail address and try to set up a new one.

In the US you have Micro Center as the exception to that, but in lucky there is 1 in my state, and even more lucky that its not that far away. Most states do not have one.
Agreed. I've had great experiences from the nearby Micro Center. It's a shame there aren't more of them, but I can understand why they might not want to overextend their market.

A trend I hate is the planned obsolescence with computers. My home office PC apparently isn't compatible with Windows 11 requirements, so I'd likely have to get a new one when the time comes that I'd have no choice but to upgrade. Even with utilities that help, it's still a pain to move data and essential applications from one computer to another and have to do it regularly.
 
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I guess It sort of counts, but why do all the buttons now say "got it!" instead of "OK"? I miss when things just said OK, it feels like its trying to hard to be quirky or something. Maybe I'm just nitpicky.
It's definitely been getting worse, though there's a related "trick" has been in use since the late 90's that I hate even more. It's when you're shown a popup or dialog box trying to get you to sign up or otherwise opt-in for something, and there's a "yes" option and a "no" option. Naturally the "yes/opt-in" button or link is prominent, gigantic, and selected/focused by default and the "no" button or link is understated, smaller and often made to look "greyed out" or disabled somehow. That's not what bugs me and that's not the actual trick.

What really pisses me off is the language used on the decline/opt-out/don't install button. It's never "No" or "Cancel." It's always some stupid "psychological trick" -- it'll say "Maybe later" or "Not now" or "Not yet" like they're trying to pull a jedi mind trick on you with a non-committal answer. Or the passive-aggressive "No thank you," as if I should be grateful to be given the option not to agree to (or install) their shit.

The really ballsy ones will have "no/opt-out" options with phrasings like "No, I want my computer to be vulnerable" or "No, I like wasting money" or "No, I don't want to invest in my children's future." Those are mostly reserved for programs that try to install malware or other garbage with them during installation, though.

Still, fuck every asshole out there who does shit like this.

Did I mention I really don't like the new tech trend of getting at least 1 scam call a day?
I will find out who really owns and operates that fucking car warranty scam some day and it will not be a good day for them when I do.
 
The really ballsy ones will have "no/opt-out" options with phrasings like "No, I want my computer to be vulnerable" or "No, I like wasting money" or "No, I don't want to invest in my children's future." Those are mostly reserved for programs that try to install malware or other garbage with them during installation, though.
There's a similar trick with cookies now that they pop up menus. First of all, there's an endless list of options to scroll down and disable, all the while the "accept all/ok" button is visible. On the bottom there might be a "reject all" button, but the floating menu only shows "save changes" or the green "Accept current/OK". That's really scummy, click through all of that and pressing the green button will undo it.
 
Online shopping can be full of bullshit, even if it's useful to get stuff not sold locally.

Shipping fees, waiting days to weeks to get the thing, delivery issues, "porch poachers"...

At least with buying stuff the old way, one gets it right away with no delivery issues.
 
Online shopping was great in my country when nobody knew about it. Delivery times were quick, prices were attractive and it was comfortable. Still comfortable I guess but COVID caused an online boom, which means I have to wait longer for my packages and there are just in general more delivery issues.
 
Online shopping for "lightbulbs" is bullshit. With these modern fake bulbs, they always lie about watt equivalents, and/or hide some critical number from the product description, so that you really can't completely compare. LED bulbs are dim as fuck and I hate them.
Huh? If you're only buying from bootleggers I can see this making sense in some form but shopping by lumens you can find ones that easily beat cfls and incadescents at the same wattage. That's the reason LEDs have caught on.
 
These complaints make sense about the early LED bulbs but the new ones are amazing and you also can get the comfiest, warm tones. You absolutely do get what you pay for, though.

I can't tell the difference, honestly, and I don't miss changing the bulb every 6-8 months. If they had LED bulbs like they do now back when they tried to make everyone go to CFL, they wouldn't have had to ban anything. The market would have done it naturally.
 
I want a modern floppy disk that has several terabytes of storage.

Isn't that called a MicroSD card? Limited to 1 or 2 tb of storage currently, but it's totally the replacement for floppies, just with re-writable RAM instead of magnetic media inside.

The exact same uses are there however, without having to use a hole-punch to be able to access the perfectly working second side of the floppy.
 
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I can't tell the difference, honestly, and I don't miss changing the bulb every 6-8 months. If they had LED bulbs like they do now back when they tried to make everyone go to CFL, they wouldn't have had to ban anything. The market would have done it naturally.
CFL was the worst. Terrible for everything/everyone. Haz-Mat bulbs that cost $5 a piece when they came out.
Mercury dust when you dropped one. Hazardous overheating/plasma conditions.
Thanks Obama.
 
Remember when video game consoles had their own currency instead of using a country's equivalent?

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Yeah, I don't miss that. I would like to know how much something is directly rather than do math to convert its price.

Oh, wait a minute...

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Oh, it got worse when developers realized they can nickel and dime people.
 
It's to stop idling. But, it can be disruptive.

Speaking of which, why does every car need a big screen? Cars are more reliant on computer parts than mechanical components now.
To be fair, since moving to computer controlled fuel injection, cars have relied on computers albeit it's not as pervasive as we see now in many modern cars. Canbus connection to the radio is an annoyance but you need it for all the various convenience features.
 
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