• Spice Hoarder@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    Maybe giving the village idiot the ability to broadcast their conspiracies at the click of a button was a bad idea. Back in the day you at least had to know HTML and have entertaining gifs if you were spreading misinformation.

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    “No, like, you literally won’t believe it. Your kids will have access to most of the breadth of human knowledge, and you’re still gonna remain convinced that chemtrails are turning the frogs gay.”

  • zout@fedia.io
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    18 hours ago

    C64 with a disk drive, a tape drive, a monitor and a printer? These guys were loaded.

  • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    I mean, that’s how it was originally sold. I think it was '95 and we were watching ‘CNN in the Classroom’ I think, and we saw something about how you could use the internet to see photos from some art museum. Basically, experience the museum without having to go there! My teacher was like, “Well, I think we have access to the internet, let’s try it out”. It was slow, but yeah, we got to see some stuff at like dial-up speeds. I remember when they talked about virtual shops and what that might look like (which was oftem more a virtual representation of the store than the grids we have today). Kids in my class back then were getting better grades simply because they had a proper printer, word processor, and information (probably Encarta 95 or something like it). My stuff was hand-written, or I used a typewriter, grammar and spelling mistakes everywhere, and I had to go to the public library (where I think they literally copy pasted some stuff and turned it in… it was the 90’s)