True color is 32 bit.
What do you think would surprise a person from the 1950s most about modern computers?
How disposable they've become. We toss away computers like old socks.
How we got away from the model of timesharing for so long, only to go right back to cloud computing. People were so eager to personalize the experience, it's why things like the PDP-1 came into existance in the late 50s.
How much software went from this thing that was freely, openly shared as just a point of fact to a world where people pay for software regularly.
How much people trust a computer to think for them. A computer cannot think, it can only do math really fast, *you* have to think about how to make use of that platform to make your workload easier. People using computers in the 50s understood this implicitly, and now some people want shitty autocomplete to do the hard part for them. The human tasks that are worth doing, but that's a whole rant in itself.
How much computers just get powered off, or just run without doing anything, because of how plentiful and commonplace they are. In the 50s, no computer time was wasted, it was too expensive. If the machine was operational back then, it was busy.
You might like folk punk
inventing new genre of music blending ska and punk. calling it skunk. primary instrument is a trashcan
I am visiting my parent's, this painting has always been hung in a prominent location through the houses they've owned. Funny to see it online.
Andrew Wyeth - Master bedroom (1965)
in the art stew diode. straight up “shorpenin it”. and by “it”, haha, well. let’s just say. my pencels.
who else sharpens their pencils like this
This is what the future will look like? I can’t wait.
Home Office Life (2001)
Fire escape. There were some pulleys and weights suspended above that looked neat.
My blog, or attempt at one. On the internet I’m a 22 year old guy, but in real life I’m, well… the same. (My pfp is what I look like)
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