• Sausage_Mahoney@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was there for the shot heard 'round the world. The day a hero died and it’s all been wrong ever since.

    I was at the Cincinnati Zoo The day Harambee was murdered.

    Dicks out.

  • dumbass@leminal.space
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    1 个月前

    I was there when Metallica tried to kill piracy by killing Napster and in turn, created a giant market of music piracy programs.

    • MrEff@lemmy.world
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      1 个月前

      To counter Metallica, Nine Inch Nails at about the same time then went on and very publicly said to steal his music because the label was overcharging his fans and he would rather they listen to it than he get paid. He then started releasing his albums for free where you pay what you want on his website. And this is just one reason I am a life long NIN fan and stopped listening to Metallica after middle school.

      • MojoMcJojo@lemmy.world
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        1 个月前

        I remember watching that and thinking, they don’t sound very rock-‘n’-roll. I guess they lived long enough to become the corporate villain

  • KISSmyOSFeddit@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was arrested at a G8 summit while I was helping block the road Putin’s motorcade was about to use, but police had to let me go cause they didn’t have the manpower to process all the protestors.

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 个月前

      I still remember the Toronto g20. Police assigned a park as a free speech zone, surrounded it, put on masks, took off their name tags and went in to beat the shit out of everyone in sight. Men, women, children, the disabled. Hundreds of people tossed into coed massive cells with a shared bucket for a toilet, sexual assaults happened etc. That day Canadian police proved without a doubt that they’re every bit as bad as American cops, and I’ve hated them ever since.

  • CarterH739@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I actually just became a grandfather two days ago. I’m looking forward to, “Listen, things were different back in the nineteen hundreds…”

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        1 个月前

        Seriously, we had snow back then. Lots of. But the world has moved on

        I could tell my kids about snow days, school bus sliding into the ditch, walking home when no one could get up our hill. I could talk how anything not cleared quickly, icier over and remained for the winter. My kids will be able to tell stories about me jokingly wishing to get enough snow to try out my new snow blower. They’ll tell about the arguments about clearing the driveway in case we need to go out, vs waiting a couple days for it to melt

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 个月前

      I have a buddy in his late 30s who just became a grandpa. He had his kid in high school when he was like 17. His son is now like 19 and just had a kid of his own. That shit is crazy

  • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was there when smart phones came out.

    When Y2K didn’t happen

    When the internet was a useful tool and not monetized to shit

    When the thread of sanity broke and society began to transition into some Lordranesque nightmare of tribes.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      1 个月前

      When Y2K didn’t happen

      *When tens of thousands of people spent years of their lives making sure Y2K wouldn’t happen.

    • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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      1 个月前

      Y2K happened, just not how everyone thought.

      Instead it was a huge marketing ploy. Everyone spent money to be protected and safe. We all listened to Prince as the ball dropped.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        1 个月前

        IT really wasn’t. Sure, it had way too much hype, but a lot of the saner predictions really could have happened, except for the huge amount of work so many of us went through.

        I was working at an investment management company at the time, one of the first “quant shops”, and there was an unimaginably vast flood of money coming through that could have ground to a halt, with ear splitting squeals and shrieks. Our stuff wasn’t retail, but you bet people would have suffered with any disruption of business, retirement plans of millions in jeopardy, investments of the wealthy, corporate wealth of all types would have been hit hard. And there were so many companies in similar condition. I was on remediation projects for a couple of years, along with most of my team and consultants when we could, and we came through with no glitches!

        And yes that was the first time I was tempted to be a consultant, to get a bigger share of the money being spent. And yes I did celebrate New Years with by far the most expensive trip I had gone on to that point - included tickets for three headliner concerts, expensive suites, and unlimited margaritas

  • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was still up for Portillo, back in 1997.

    What an amazing night. I had never known anything but Conservative government, so to see those corrupt, selfish bastards swept away was absolutely joyous in a way that’s hard to fully capture in words.

    Obviously the Blair government eventually completely fucked things up with Iraq, but at the time it felt like genuine liberation after years and years of sleaze and hatred.

    And IMO things genuinely did change for the better in the UK with the Blair government, whether or not you agreed with every policy they had. Then Sept 11 happened, and Iraq and Afghanistan, and the world started going inexorably to shit, and it’s never really recovered.

  • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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    1 个月前

    The world before the Internet.

    I was there. We had to go to the library if we wanted information. The magazine aisle at the grocery store is where you got your up to date info that you couldn’t always get on TV. TV was like 5 channels. A few more local ones if you were lucky.

    They’re was nothing on TV after a certain hour. Just static, or colored bars and a buzzer. You had to wait till morning for TV broadcasts to start again.

    No one had cell phones. You had to go to your friends house to see if they were home, and yell for them at their window.

    Fun times.

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 个月前

      Remember when there was the morning News, and then the 6pm and 11pm news. That’s it. Now it’s news channels running 24/7

  • experbia@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was once personally responsible for making Red jump off the long ledge in front of the elite 4 in the very first Twitch Plays Pokémon. it happened a lot but I know I caused it once. sometimes it’s so easy to be a villain.

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was there for the beginning of the internet …

    Al Gore was instrumental in passing legislation that set the foundation for commercialized internet … and all us old-timers hated it.

    Nope, I was there as serial cables and token ring coalesced toward Ethernet, various telemetry and others built toward a common internet, individual well-known servers gave way to a vast directory of dozens.

    Much later on, there was this minor invention of Tim Berners-Lee that brought everything together, and I was one of the coders for what may have been the first 401k management web site

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I was waiting tables at the Eat N Park across the street from the bank where the “Pizza Bomber” exploded. We couldn’t tell what was happening from where we were, but I was there.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I watched the Challenger explode on live TV from my school classroom. The teachers were all ecstatic about the mission because NASA was sending a teacher into space. It took a minute for us to realize what happened, even though we literally watched it explode in front of our eyes.

    • acetanilide@lemmy.world
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      Years later, I was a child waiting for Columbia to land when all of the adults started acting weird…then we found out. But i didn’t quite understand at first. I remember wondering how they landed in Houston when they were planning on Florida. I was smart enough to know that that wasn’t really an option but not enough to put it together until later.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    My mom ran away from home to see Elvis in a high school auditorium, and was in Little Rock when it was being integrated, I always thought that was cool.

    I saw Nirvana before they were famous, in a crowd of about 30 people in a club here, and barely missed being blown up over Lockerbie, but the moment that stands out most in my mind is: I was getting frisked (felt up ) by a cop on a US city street when, no shit, the English punk band GBH were walking by and they started shouting at the cops, oh my God I have never felt so cool.

  • waz@lemmy.world
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    1 个月前

    I remember borrowing CDs from friends and converting them to MP3s in the mid-late 90s. Admittedly I didn’t really know what I was doing, so I couldn’t really explain it to my friends, but ripping CDs with Windows CLI programs and amassing a huge (for the time) digital music collection was something I thought was super cool. Unlike wav files, I could actually (not always) fit a whole song on a floppy disc!