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want to feel old?

Yesterday in my Spanish class I made my usual pathetic attempt to speak the language by stating the my friends and I used to play Super Mario 3, Street Fighter 2 and Sonic the Hedgehog.

Most of the class then proceeded to laugh.

Damn kids need to get off my lawn.

:lol:

It's not the damn kids. It's their damn dogs.

In my neighborhood anyway.
 
Yesterday in my Spanish class I made my usual pathetic attempt to speak the language by stating the my friends and I used to play Super Mario 3, Street Fighter 2 and Sonic the Hedgehog.
That reminds me of an oral presentation one student did in my 11th-grade Spanish class. The topic was contemporary music. If you really want to get blank stares from 9-year-olds today, mention bands like Los Chicos de la Playa or José del Campo y los Peces!
 
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23 now, got my first computer in 2002 or thereabouts. Internet to that computer decent enough for web browsing came in 2003 or 4, switching from dial up (10 kBps conxn) to broadband (seems to run at least 100 kBps, often 250 or better). before those years, Internet and computer use was an at-school luxury.

Got my cell phone at age 18, when I started to go to college in 2005.

I had kind of an old school, and also isolated, childhood too, I reckon. Close to no access to video games, and not enough time in one place nor opportunity to establish a cohort of friends to play with.

In his introduction to a recent reprint of Neuromancer, William Gibson talks about just how dated some parts of it are now.

On the one hand, he jokes that contemporary readers may wonder why cell phones aren't allowed in Night City.

On the other, he notes that contemporary readers who have grown up with cable TV may not even understand the first line of the novel: "The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel."

If you grew up watching black and white broadcast TV, the way Gibson and I did, you'd know that he was describing a silvery glow.

Nowadays, young people will read that, and likely think: "Okay, the sky was blue--so what?" :lol:

I'da pictured a sky like this reading that line.
 
I'da pictured a sky like this reading that line.

Hmm. Now that I re-read that introduction, it turns out that may be what he had in mind as well: "the black-and-white video static of my childhood, sodium-silvery and almost painful."

But now I wonder what it was that I remember. :confused: I definitely remember tuning an old B&W console TV to a channel that was nothing but a silvery glow.
 
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I'da pictured a sky like this reading that line.

Hmm. Now that I re-read that introduction, it turns out that may be what he had that in mind as well: “the black-and-white video static of my childhood, sodium-silvery and almost painful.”
It's called snow. A casualty of the digital age.
But now I wonder what it was that I remember. :confused: I definitely remember tuning an old B&W console TV to a channel that was nothing but a silvery glow.
That was the channel used by beings from another dimension. If you got too close to the TV, it would suck you into an alternate universe.
 
What makes me feel old (born in 1983) is that some people born in the '90s are now adults, and have been for a couple years. :wtf:
 
I'da pictured a sky like this reading that line.

Hmm. Now that I re-read that introduction, it turns out that may be what he had that in mind as well: “the black-and-white video static of my childhood, sodium-silvery and almost painful.”
It's called snow. A casualty of the digital age.

R.I.P. analog television. I may have gotten a somewhat snowy picture with you, but at I could see a usable picture out of every important TV channel around here with some manipulation of the antena. Now, since digital has replaced you, the weaker channels cannot be gotten unless by subscription to Satellite or cable.
 
It's a little scary, though. The next generation will probably be using computers before they know how to use the toilet.

My two year old can operate the DVD player and the computer, but refuses to use the potty. :shrug:
 
Those kids are so cute. I find the video to be very funny. They didnt know 'Hit me baby one more time'. I guess I do feel alittle old. The funniest part I think was the dial up question. They came up with all sorts of answers.
 
What makes me feel old (born in 1983) is that some people born in the '90s are now adults, and have been for a couple years. :wtf:

It's even worse for those of us born in 1970. Like me, for instance.

Tell me, you are one year older than a friend of mine. This guy does not wear his seat belt when driving, always stares at his blackberry while driving, texting and surfing the internet (yeah, while driving), and all the time, accuses me of being a relic of the 20th century because I want him to occasionally put his phone down and interact with, you know, people. He doesn't understand why I won't send him text messages while we're having lunch, when we are right across the table from each other!!:scream: He keeps saying I need to "join the 21st century". Are his attitudes common among people your age?

He makes me feel like my grandpa, who used to complain about the worthlessness of my generation.
 
Tell me, you are one year older than a friend of mine. This guy does not wear his seat belt when driving, always stares at his blackberry while driving, texting and surfing the internet (yeah, while driving), and all the time, accuses me of being a relic of the 20th century because I want him to occasionally put his phone down and interact with, you know, people. He doesn't understand why I won't send him text messages while we're having lunch, when we are right across the table from each other!!:scream: He keeps saying I need to "join the 21st century". Are his attitudes common among people your age?

No. I was born in 1983 and that's not common. It's called being a douche and it happens in every generation. Technology can just makes it more obvious.
 
It's even worse for those of us born in 1970. Like me, for instance.
Hell, you're a youngster. I was born in 1953. When I was a boy, most cars didn't even have seatbelts. But every car had at least four ashtrays!
 
Tell me, you are one year older than a friend of mine. This guy does not wear his seat belt when driving, always stares at his blackberry while driving, texting and surfing the internet (yeah, while driving), and all the time, accuses me of being a relic of the 20th century because I want him to occasionally put his phone down and interact with, you know, people. He doesn't understand why I won't send him text messages while we're having lunch, when we are right across the table from each other!!:scream: He keeps saying I need to "join the 21st century". Are his attitudes common among people your age?

No. I was born in 1983 and that's not common. It's called being a douche and it happens in every generation. Technology can just makes it more obvious.

Hmm. I wondered if it was a generational thing because I see young kids (as young as six sometimes) with cell phones, iPods, and similar stuff all the time. And, as I said, my friend in question keeps telling me that I need to join the 21st century. Older folks seem to rely less on these things.
 
Tell me, you are one year older than a friend of mine. This guy does not wear his seat belt when driving, always stares at his blackberry while driving, texting and surfing the internet (yeah, while driving), and all the time, accuses me of being a relic of the 20th century because I want him to occasionally put his phone down and interact with, you know, people. He doesn't understand why I won't send him text messages while we're having lunch, when we are right across the table from each other!!:scream: He keeps saying I need to "join the 21st century". Are his attitudes common among people your age?

No. I was born in 1983 and that's not common. It's called being a douche and it happens in every generation. Technology can just makes it more obvious.

I was born in '87 and I don't even do that! 'Bout the only thing I will do, which is a hefty ticket if I get caught, is talk on the phone, and even then that less than a minute if someone called me.
 
I already feel old. I have been working with a Co-op college student at my work and I had to explain what DMZ meant. How can any college not teach that? How can that not be a part of History taught to them?
 
I already feel old. I have been working with a Co-op college student at my work and I had to explain what DMZ meant. How can any college not teach that? How can that not be a part of History taught to them?

I will raise my hand and say that I have no idea what DMZ is.


EDIT: Okay, I had a feeling it stood for "demilitarized zone," but I've certainly never learned about it in school. If anything, I think the only place I've heard the term is on Deep Space 9.

Also, if you google it, the first thing that pops up is a wikipedia article on computer firewalls.
 
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