• Atropos@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Fixing a car.

    I’d much, much rather twist some carburetor screws or replace a fuse than have to try to troubleshoot some encrypted CANBUS acceleration sensor that is required for my suspension to work properly.

  • hedge_lord@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Programming. Telling a machine “build x feature” is nervewracking because I do not know what it’s doing and more importantly boring because it takes all the joy out of writing code. Even the LLM completions I do not use because I have seen what it has done to my coworkers’ brains. I will think about the problem. I will write the code. I will know what it does. It will be of me, not of some averaging machine.

    May the LLM era end in darkness and the gnashing of teeth amen.

  • Berttheduck@lemmy.ml
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    10 hours ago

    Shaving with a double edged razor rather than a cartridge one. The whole process is much more meditative and rewarding when you actually focus on the moment and take the time to do it properly. Gives a better shave too.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I miss physically owning software, movies, and music, not having to pay a subscription for car features like heated seats or more horsepower. I miss getting a complete game that was usually mostly glitch free on day one you got it on CD/DVD.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Socializing.

    No social media to distract people. Nobody staring a phones. Nobody recording themselves for streaming.

    You memorized phone numbers or wrote them down. You called or got called to meet up at some place and everyone went from there.

  • NebulaNomad@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    Photography. Film was so advanced, having a layer for each major colour, every film stock has a different feeling. The only downside was cost, but you only took a picture when you were sure it is a good picture. Now we have tons of digital garbage because we take 100 pictures at once.

    • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      The old family picture books had so much value, now I can’t remember if I ever even looked at any past photos I took with my phone, it’s all just digital waste now

    • chrizzowski@lemmy.ca
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      11 hours ago

      Film is crazy advanced. One of those “how did humanity figure this out?” kind of things. Smarter Every Day YouTube channel did a thorough tour of Kodak and it’s pretty fascinating all that goes into it.

      The deliberate act of shooting that the financial and time cost definitely makes better photos. You can do that with digital as well but it takes more discipline. Far easier to shoot a dozen and hope one works than to think and come up with the right one from the start.

      Both have their place I think. Any time I shoot a race, wedding, or a once in a life trip I’m so glad it’s digital! Being able to do a 10 shot burst and nail the facial expression is pretty awesome. Then slowing down and going on a local hike and setting up my 4x5 to take one shot, or a photo walk around town with an old SLR is a blast too.

      Maybe I just like photography?

    • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I feel the opposite. Film sucked so bad. I love pointing my phone at things and shooting a hundred shots and finding something good there or not finding anything and continueing with my day. Old photography was a pointless torture.

  • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    I liked connecting to irc servers and setting up a znc bouncer (also an on ramp into self hosting!) way better than anything matrix and discord do.

    We had mumble for voice chat and that was perfectly serviceable.

  • grasshopper_mouse@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    In the 90s, I felt like I knew so much about computers, both the hardware and the software, but I’ve definitely fallen off from all the improvements in the past 20 years, and I’m so Goddamn lost now. I miss those simpler times when it was more about the physical aspects of a PC and less about the technical aspects.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    Japan mostly skipped PCs (outside of offices). Since their phones were ahead of the curve, a lot of stuff was designed for them. That means that a bunch of stuff is either exclusively done through some shitty mobile app, fax, or in person. There was a brief phase where PC versions did exist, but those are almost all being neglected or decommissioned now. I much prefer to do things on a PC with a nice, clear, big screen, especially if I need to use some translation tool since the text tends to expand (learning thousands of kanji for stuff like legal and taxes is hard).

    I do miss physically owning media. A lot of physical media still decays, though, so not a panacea.

    Software programs that were much more tested and completed before release.

    Software development where we think things through, define requirements, define states, etc. before any code is committed. I do think PoCs are fine to throw something against a wall but, if it works, the proper version should go through those design phases before anyone writes a line of code. Cheap components and fast machines and networks have made people lazy which makes software worse in a number of ways quite often. No vibecoding. No AI/LLM shoved into everything. I think they can have uses in certain contexts (rephrasing questions, generating examples/docs in projects with bad/no docs, etc.), but hate how they are being shoved into everything.

    An internet not run by corporations. I think a lot of people do see it through rose-tinted glasses (we still had trolls on BBS, UseNet, IRC, etc. and other bad actors), but a lot of things were much better.

    Third spaces. Places where people of different backgrounds would interact in some common way. Sure, some were echo chambers just like online communities today, but many were not and let people interact together rather than just being othered to the point of fear and reviling.

    I much prefer AD&D 2.5 rules to anything around today (and TSR still existing, but that ship has sailed).

    • SSTF@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I do miss physically owning media. A lot of physical media still decays, though, so not a panacea.

      I prefer digital media that is locally stored. Many complaints I see about digital media revolves around DRM or a service’s ability to remove media that you think you “own”.

      I think locally stored media solves that without taking us back to the days of a shelf of hundreds of DVDs.

      I do own some physical media like certain very old PC games but only because there is no good digital option available that’s more convenient.

      • Rob T Firefly@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        I use locally stored digital media, but I still love my shelves of DVDs, CDs, and paper books. The CDs get ripped to FLAC and mostly left on the shelf thereafter, but I do still enjoy taking a movie off the shelf and loading it into the player.

  • Log in | Sign up@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Hand crank screwdriver

    Just pop in a magnetic screwdriver bit holder and you have strong power and perfect control.

    It countersinks with ease but without the risk of screwing too deep like its electric counterpart all too easily does.

  • Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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    1 day ago

    I want a phone where I am able to reach the top and the bottom of the screen without shifting my grip. Also being able to comfortably store in a pocket would be nice

  • couch1potato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    It grinds my gears that programs are called ‘apps’ now. On phones it was normalized immediately, so, sure. Computers run programs, though, god dammit.

    • slaneesh_is_right@lemmy.org
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      2 days ago

      Something like 20 years ago, i assumed that every generation that comes after mine, will be so much better with computers, because they grow up with it. So that’s not true at all as it turns out. I remember working with 20is year old guys together and they they mostly had iphones. They told me that they are also into computers, gaming and stuff like that. The more i talked to them the more i realised that they have no idea what i was talking about. I explained one of them how to do a thing on his phone and he was super lost. It was worse thN explaining my mom something. He kept asking where he finds the app i’m talking about and i kept telling him that it’s not an app, it’s something you do on the phone. Yeah i get that, but i don’t have the app for that.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Microsoft have been calling discrete computer programs “applications” since at least the Windows 95 era, when Program Manager was replaced with the start menu. They’ve been inconsistently kinda-sorta doing so since even Windows 3.x, maybe even more, but nobody was closely paying attention back then.

      It didn’t become the current situation of monkey-see-monkey-do until Apple started using the terminology heavily with the iPhone, as you have observed. But they actually cribbed it from good old M$, much as they’ve cribbed basically everything else they’ve done in the modern era from someone else and simply painted it glossy white.

    • CannedYeet@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Program is such a funny word when you remember it’s an analogy from radio and TV. Radio and TV are just delivery mechanisms for programs, which are the content and point of the medium.

      You could define a podcast as an internet-delivered audio program.

      • blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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        1 day ago

        In the UK, “programme” is used for events, TV shows, and schedules, while “program” is specifically used in computing contexts.

      • JeremyHuntQW12@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        The term was changed to application when Win 95 came out. An application runs over the API (Application Programming Interface) in Windows, whereas a program in MS-DOS ran straight off the motherboard.

      • Longpork3@lemmy.nz
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        1 day ago

        Outside of Unix based programs, probably not a lot.

        In terms of their functionality most programs are standalone applications rather than tools where you modify the programming flow of the data.