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A couple more rubber duckies on the dash should sort that right out


Compare their used values at 5 years


And isn't protection against fire, flood, theft or other disasters.


I love the parents in the tech community. They had unfettered computer and internet access which formed them into the successful people they are today. But they were special and their circumstance was special and their kids are not allowed to use the internet because now its bad.

old_man_yells_at_cloud.jpg


Lots of people in the tech community also struggle with attention and social disorders. Being good at computers is not the only thing that matters in life.


It's not that the internet is bad, the internet is very different from what it used to be. Apps using mainly algorithmic based recommendations, such as TikTok, use that and other dark design patterns to exploit users more than ever before.


There is a huge survival bias that you are not considering. Today's parents that had unlimited access to the Wild West that was 90s internet and are successful today do not represent the whole population of people who had access to internet in that era.


The unfettered computer and internet access was a desktop machine (which needed to run a minimalist distro) on dial-up in a very public room. The fun that taught me tech stuff was getting to distro to work, and there was no privacy. Parents were much more aware of the dangers back then.

Nowdays everythibg on smartphones "just works", and the OS won't even let the user access system files. I meet college students who have no idea what a file system is, or what a DNS server is.

Times have changed, indeed.


Yeah well only in the last 10 years did internet companies start employing psychology PHDs to find the best possible ways to exploit people they can. That is basically what the problem is. Short-form content and algorithmic display of what evidently appeals to you the most is literally zombifying people.


So to follow my example, that would be no computer or internet until age 15. I don't know, seems harsh. I'll also have to swap my TV for a 10" one that only gets 2 stations.


It's true, by the time I was in college, I did have unfettered access to USENET. ;-)


Yeah but this is the old debate old vs new. Plus is not the kids is the parents.

Let me give another example: a nice village where I spend my childhood. Every day on the streets, forests, you name it. No time/hours limit, no space limit - play until fully tired. Now, visiting again, there are no kids on the streets. I thought to ask my relatives and people I know. And I find out that is not that kids do not want to play outside, they are _not allowed_ to play outside!!.

Why? "the kids are now kidnapped from the street" - "how?" "I heard from a neihbour from her cousin that lives in the village 10km that this happened!" ( not true - the kid got in a black car which was the uncle showing of his new BMW )..". Another example "Rapist are now free!" ... "no way!" "Yes, yes, this happened" ( was a case 3 years ago in a city 30 km away - a normal man got in a quarrel with a girl and the little mischevious said to get away that he touched ...no comment ).

yelling_and_pulling_hair.tiff


Infinite-scroll content (especially mindless VIDEO content) was NOT a thing when we were kids. And we also had to sit down at a desk and browse the internet on a computer.

Having 24/7 access to infinite amounts of brainless content in your pocket is not something we ever had to contend with. This is uncharted territory. And it's terrifying.


LOL... to have unfettered access to games, I had to program them myself though.

I fully intend to extend the same circumstances to my own kid, seems fair


Good? Dozens of fee free instant digital payment options sounds like a huge improvement over the outrageous network of credit/debit fees


Tech debt is such a flawed concept. There is no world where requirements 10 years later are the same as the MVP, or even foreseeable. You can never pay it off. Software is always changing.

Even if it were debt, debt is a tool to get you what you need today. And then you likely roll it into something down the line. Maybe you pay it off (and even then the asset still requires maintenance) Like a starter home, then upgrading to a larger home to start a family, etc, etc. Requirements and resources are in constant flux.


tech debt is rarely "payed off" all at once, its more like paying it off over time so your "monthly bill" (productivity loss/slowdown) doesn't bankrupt your project

  > Requirements and resources are in constant flux.
this is precisely why over time you pay off that debt - that keeps your project rolling at a good pace - is the point


i take out debt to build a thing that satifies today's requirements. its irrelevant whether the requirements change. the debt is still taken out in the code or whatever other solution

debt for requirements that arent there anymore should be forgiven, and the system deleted. thats different than paying off the debt


Yes, the sounds of intense sleep apnea. Typically recording 4 or 5 people snoring overlaid into a harmony of sleep sound


Understandable! I have my wife to reproduce the same setup so I guess I'm lucky to not having to depend on extra technology for the same thing.


Completely off-grid, organic, no ads, completely private, no planned-obsolence, reproducible, reliable... the list goes on, lucky indeed!


Maintenance costs tho.


The DX7 is an incredible synth, but one of the joys of playing is hearing the sound change to your adjustments and the DX7 just doesn't do that. But it is great fun to feed through filter, delay and reverb pedals. Thats kind of the best of both worlds


just for the audience, the DX7 used a newly invented type of synthesis (FM but that doesn't tell you or anybody else anything) and it was alone among synths at the time to produce metallic, brass, bell, etc. sounds. Performers flocked to it to get away from the same old analog synth sound everybody else had. FM synths are programmable, but not easily, and the menu diving was not practical while playing.

Analog (subtractive) synths are very much back in popularity right now and they offer lots of knobs to give bwahgrrrssshhhhwow type transformations


>The DX7 is an incredible synth, but one of the joys of playing is hearing the sound change to your adjustments and the DX7 just doesn't do that

...but Yamaha Reface DX does.

I've been changing the sound while playing the synth to go from the ePiano preset to an aggressive synth lead as a demo of that interface.

It's pure joy, and an underrated piece of hardware.


It's even better with the Dtronics expander, but still too much faff for me.


Thanks, I didn't know about it - and it seems like an awesome addition to the machine!


I had something like this running from a docker container but ultimately I gave up and got an airprint native printer. Its one of those things I just don't want to tinker with when I need


I expect to be very responsible during my working hours.


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