This was cutting edge tech… I remember the excitement of replacing floppy discs with CDRs…
Damn kids acting like 5-10 years before they were born was the dark ages. Damn.
I’m not even 30 yet and I ripped CDs in my youth. I didn’t use limewire though, we would use torrents already at that point.
i witnessed the creation of the mp3 format!
RealAudio
.ra files taught me why proprietary is a bad word.
oh yeah that piece of crap i haven’t missed ^^
There was nothing at all wrong with… <BUFFERING>
I could hear the pixels…
It was better than WAV; a nice bridge over to MP3.
And rmvb files were all the rage. Those sweet video files with only 32MB… Peak compression. What the world was before h264 and before youtube existed was amazing.
Don’t forget good ol DivX
My computer’s mobo was so shitty, it played .midi files badly. I was shocked when I went to a mate’s and the same midis sounded like the song they’re actually supposed to be.
And then backing them onto zip disks. Good times.
Bro, Zip disks were for the porn you downloaded from WinMX.
Well, yes… In hidden folders cause I was a l33t h4kz0r in my youth. But that’s just between me and you.
Yes, fuck you
I’m quite a bit older than this…
Yeah, I was going to bring up Turbo buttons, but then realised that the Commodore Vic 20 in my bedroom predates that by quite some margin 😇
Vic 20 -> C=64 -> few 386/486 units -> AMD K6-2 and a ton of stuff after that. And maybe something in between.
And now I’m writing this in my garage computer which I picked up from a e-waste pile at work few years back and it has more computing power than pretty much all the systems combined I had before being 18 years old. And when we (as a family) got our first “mobile” phone it was hardwired to a car electronics since they took ‘a bit’ more power than the supercomputers we carry in our pockets today (obviously Li-ion batteries were not a thing either, but that old Motorola NMT450 took a crapload of power by todays standards).
It’s been a wild ride so far. My grandparents were on top of the technology when they got the first landline phone around the neighborhood (I’m living in a rural area so it was not a new invention back then by any stretch) and now I can just yell to a entity in my palm to show me pictures from another planet or a high definition live video from Earth orbit.
And still I’m somehow trying to teach basic tehcnology concepts to both my parents and my kids. It’s bizarre to try and explain about benefits of touch typing to a 16 year old who thinks it’s pretty much impossible for anyone to type out an essay at school containing 2000 words in an hour (33wpm)…
I’m plastic Kawasaki keyboard on top of the C64 keyboard old.
😂
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I’m exactly that old.
Edit: The PC in the image is a bit anachronistic. This is the workhorse we’re all thinking of:
That or the ol’ tan cased dinosaurs.
The gray Dell helped me through many-a “100 Games!” disc…
Dell Dimension 2400. My family had the entry level model, and it still absolutely destroyed every prior computer we’d had performance-wise
Wasn’t that called the optiplex, or something similar? Pretty sure I had one myself.
I had an Optipex from that era too. It was “horizontal” but could also stand vertically. It was the business model.
This one, but beige:
The image is the Precision model which was the consumer version of it.
The one in the pic says Dimension 2400 on it.
Yeah, I mean to say Dimension and typed Precision. My bad.
We use to flip the light gray flap all shift in computer lab in middle school. When we got bored with that, we figured out how to pop out the Dell logo and flip it upside down
You’re real close to the “capacitor of death” models there. GX270s failed like a motherfucker.
We could swap those boards out and in like a fucking NASCAR pit crew.
Between the capacitor plague and the tin whiskers from the phaseout of lead, hardware from that era failed constantly.
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If you aren’t this old I don’t think you can be called old yet
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I remember feeling like such a badass when I got a CD player that could read MP3 files burned to a disc. I’d have an entire band’s discography burned to a single disc and felt like some sort of musical library with my binder full of MP3 CDs.
Mp3 were a revolution. There was also the format wars with wmv on the table.
im literally 15, youre acting like CDs are antique vor smth
No, because my country was pretty much too small and poor to have brand-name sharpies, we just had felt pens with other names. Carioca I believe was the most prominent brand back then.
Tell your kids we used to burn cd for entertainment, then proceed to take a torch to the cd.
To be fair I’ve done that too haha.
I still use CDs at work…