The early mass-adopted Internet, where every company aimed at kids had a website with free games, where everyone who wanted to share about themselves or their interests did so in their own little corner so you could rabbit-hole your way through the link trees, most stuff was non-monetized or had easy-to-block ads, and no tracking of your behavior was really happening.
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People who weren't online at the time can't possibly imagine how truly awesome the Internet used to be.
I miss separate websites.
Every Cartoon Network show having it's own free games on their website was peak computer room time for me in elementary school. Fun fact: If any of you remember the Amanda Show from the early 2000s, their website AmandaPlease.com was up til 2017. It was a true nostalgia moment to remember to look at once in a blue moon as a chuckle to old website styles.
Software/Apps costing a fixed, one-time amount rather than subscription models for everything
Netflix being the only streaming offering.
Yeah, once Netflix and other streaming companies discovered exclusive content it all went to shit.
The entire point was to have content distribution separate from production, and available in one place.
Streaming was supposed to 'replace' cable television, because people were fed up of forced commercials, unavailable content and restrictions on cable television.
Well, streaming got maybe some of that corrected. However, it has turned itself into a hydra where the content is here, there and over there with price tags on every service. Ads are now forced onto us but we now have "control" over them, I guess (if you don't ad-block).
So it's like cable television all over again.
The internet.
Early internet, before everything became monetized, had an authenticity to it that we will never see again.
end of soviet union to 9/11
the liberal international order
the liberal international order
🤷
There's always bad shit happening somewhere. I specified this timeframe as it signified an end to the looming threat of nuclear annihilation and before the start of the "war on terror" which signified a start of a ramping up of civil rights abuses in the west.
My view is biased towards the west, but everyone has their own frame of reference. I am entitled to my frame of reference, as are you, and you are free to post your own timeframe you believe is "good while it lasted".
I was agreeing with you... but okay. The time period you specified is dominated by the largely uncontested ascendancy of the liberal international order, aka the West.
Blockbuster and similar video rental stores. Shit was magical before streaming or even getting movies in the mail.
Yeah, every Friday, we'd go to Blockbusters and peruse the aisles until we found a video. It was a nice tradition.
Pokémon Go. Those first few weeks and months were nothing like anyone could have imagined from a mobile game. People were outside and enjoying a game with other people. I remember seeing videos of people all running because a rare Pokemon had spawned somewhere and everyone was helping each other to get to it.
The game itself was a simple affair anyone and everyone could play with no paywalls or subscriptions. Now it’s just paywalled events, Pokemon locked behind those events and it’s just a slog to play now.
I’m glad I got to be a part of those early days.
Reminds me of geochaching. I don't think the website charged, a GPS wasn't already in everyone's hands, and the stuff we hid was good stuff.
Now they have Premium if you want to do it, and it just isn't the same.
Hanging out and house parties after high school let out, with no cell phones
My knees.
Movie theaters. Post-pandemic, tickets are more expensive, cinemas are more run-down, and movie theater etiquette has gone out the window.
i spent most of my teens and 20s at the movies, 5 bucks a movie was easy to justify. i went religiously every other week.
now it's 20+ bucks and there are always assholes kids on their phones or talking during the movie. i go maybe once a year now. i rarely have a good time. my 4K OLED tv w/ 4K is a way better picture than most every theatre. i have a better time going to the library to rent a blu ray for free than I do going to the movies.
Amateur porn.
Now it’s all OnlyFans and Christians doing hate campaigns to shut it all down.
24/7 stores is an easy one, same with the early internet.
Personally, I'd say commuting. People are getting way crazier with how they drive these days, more distracted overall, and just plain stupid.
StumbleUpon was what I personally cite as the peak of the internet.
It was a website where you made an account and selected what categories of things you were interested in. Then click the button and it would take you to a random piece of content on the internet related to that. I remember thinking at the time it was like Pandora, but for the whole internet rather than just music. Eventually it got bought and shut down.
Mint would be another one. A free, ad-deiven website with optional premoun features that allowed you to easily link all of your financial accounts. It would automatically categorize transactions, but you could manually change them and change the categories themselves. It worked great back in the early 2010's. Then Intuit bought it and it slowly got shittier. They reduced the visualization options. Eventually a few years ago they shut it down to try to get people to move to a different, paid product. Personally I moved to HomeBank, an open-source self-hosted solution. But it means I need to manually import everything.
Windows XP and 7. Before all the “AI”, bloatware and unnecessary features. Oh and that pinball game that was on xp.
that pinball game that was on xp
This one? Someone made an ad free port of it for android but it unsurprisingly got pulled off google. You can play it here and there's a link to the git where you can prob get it for android still
the transparent electronics vibe, the whole y2k was a fast and awsome era
Geocities
Cheap take out and delivery. Where I live at least shrinkflation and inflation have hit very hard and it's just not worth it at all.
The internet without megacorps. Ok, the world without megacorps.
Friends and I used to be able to throw DJ parties at clubs. Now corporations make the artists sign non-compete contracts so they cant play anywhere else in the city for several months surrounding their show with the company. So the DJs just stick with that company
Bioware before (and a little bit after) EA.
Actually that applies to Origin and Westwood as well.
Okay so maybe EVERY dev before EA buys them out.
Season cliffhangers.
Young people will never understand me in 1990, banished up to my parent's bedroom to use their TV because they had a movie on downstairs, watching William Riker calmly say "Fire" on a borg cube containing HIS CAPTAIN, and then the music du-du-du-du-duuuuu and the words "to be continued"
And then having to wait an entire goddamn 3 months to find out the outcome.
Ending seasons on cliffhangers was magical. It's still attempted sometimes today, but in the age of binge-watching and in some cases years between seasons, most shows just wrap up one season arc and start a new one. Kind of sucks.
y/a answers before i jumpted to reddit, then oracle killed it.
INDEED FORUMS, and glassdoor reviews before the astroturfing, legal threats.'
the golden age of shows/movies pre-2010, everything after that were replications of each other, and mostly filled with boring titles and copaganda militaryganda, funny enough started appearing around P45 first term. sci-fi had a pretty bad streak after 2010s, if any was remarkable enough to be re-watched. the decline of cinema quality correlated with the rise in streaming.
Completely disagree on the movies. 95% of movie advertisements are for the big budget, low writing quality blockbusters. More than half of my theater's current showings are typically original IP (or first-time adaptations) and the majority of award winners are original/first timers. If you're not seeing the original titles, I don't believe you're looking for them
'murica? Can I say that? Too soon?
Unless you were black, a woman, LGBT, on the spectrum, developmentally disabled, Irish, "Un-christian"... the list probably goes on but I've run out of things to think of.
Hope
The golden era of videogames (around -90 to 2000?). The music was rad too.
Restaurants. Used to be actually self made. Atleast in germany 80% of german restaurants use convenience to variouse big degrees. Some sell souces and soups from the package to premium prices