Or at the very least less common attachment because they grew up outside of a monoculture.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    22
    arrow-down
    5
    ·
    9 months ago

    You’d have to go pretty far back to see things change slower over 20 years than 04-24.

    I think OP is just confusing hype for reality, or just isn’t old enough to know what it was like more than a decade ago.

    It’s the only way their post makes sense, and if they aren’t going to clarify that’s what we have to assume

    • dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      17
      arrow-down
      5
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      You may be looking at the wrong things then:

      • While SSDs have been around for a while, they have only been commercially viable (for both home and enterprise use) for maybe 10-15 years.
      • Today, even a 300 dollar desktop 3d printer (especially a resin printer) will beat even the best industrial printers from just a decade ago.
      • For less than 50 bucks per month I can get an internet connection at home that’s 16000 times faster than what I had in 2004. Back then, I had to wait minutes to load a single photo, today I can stream three dozen 4k videos at once and still have bandwidth to spare.
      • The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated vaccine research a lot. We finally got mRNA vaccines to work and are now applying them to other diseases as well.
      • Ten years ago, the idea of fully reusing rockets was laughed at. The first time a first stage was reused was in 2017. Today, most new rocket designs are planned as fully or at least mostly reusable.+
      • First mass market VR headsets came out in 2012. We are are just now at a point where untethered headsets are reaching usable resolution and framerate. New headsets add features like eye tracking, finger tracking, external cameras for augmented reality…

      And so on…

      • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        15
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        And those are big changes, but consider some of the changes from 1994-2014:

        • Laptops went from a premium item for classy business people to a common household item
        • most households didn’t even have an internet connection in 1994, in 2014 most households had broadband
        • wifi
        • the birth of online commerce
        • the birth of social media
        • literally Google
        • we went from CD Players to iPods to having all the functionality of an iPod in everyone’s phone, to streaming any music we want from cloud-based services
        • we saw the birth and (relative) death of internet radio
        • while we’re on that topic, podcasts came into existence
        • we went from independent video stores to Blockbuster to Netflix DVD to Netflix streaming and Hulu as a competitor
        • furthermore, video streaming over the internet did not exist in 1994. Hell, we hadn’t even started pirating music online at scale yet. You still had to record the radio with a cassette deck in '94.
        • video games went from SNES and Genesis to PS4, XBOne, and WiiU. We’re talking Super Metroid vs Dark Souls II, or for handhelds, compare the Gameboy/Game Gear to the PS Vita/3DS. If you look at 2004 vs 2024 you’d be looking at KOTOR vs Dragon’s Dogma 2. It’s a much smaller contrast. Likewise if you look at 1984 vs 2004 it’d be from King’s Quest I to Halo 2. And just for fun, 1974 to 1994 would be dnd to Final Fantasy VI
        • hybrid cars were invented
        • hydrogen fuel cell powered busses came into existence
        • video calls went from highly expensive, borderline sci-fi (see, e.g. Back To The Future Part II and the Pokemon anime) to being built into peoples’ smartphones, tablets and laptops
      • Arbiter@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        4
        ·
        9 months ago

        Ten years ago the falcon 9 was running flights to the ISS. 9 years ago was the first successful booster landing.