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jordanlund , in It's Thursday, how is your week going?
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Found out yesterday my wife has to have an amputation... again. :(

Servais OP ,
@Servais@dormi.zone avatar

Sorry to hear...

Today ,

It feels wrong to upvote this. Hoping for a successful procedure and gentle recovery.

kionite231 , in It's Thursday, how is your week going?

Nothing special, just woke up and went to office right now writing this comment. did some configuration of zsh, vscode to make it a good experience to debug Odoo software.

Varyk ,

This comment about odoo software made me think of that Bowie song from labyrinth where he says "voodoo who do you do the power of the baaabe!"

So things are really looking up.

jordanlund , in Hobbies Wednesday - what have you done this week?
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Bought a bass guitar, should be here tomorrow.

No, I have NO idea what I'm doing.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a69dd601-d41a-4e10-b6ef-7e8e2e00f959.jpeg

Skua ,

Nice one! What's the first song you want to learn?

jordanlund ,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Lessons start on Thursday so we'll see what they have me start with (scales, I'm sure! LOL!).

If I could pull any one song out of the ether and play it perfectly it would be Higher Ground.

Either version :)

https://youtu.be/X3mRasO5bvo

https://youtu.be/1esf0efHbjM

Skua ,

Oooh I like it. I'm sure your teacher will cover this, but I'd definitely aim for the Stevie Wonder version first. The slap style that Flea plays is great fun but it's very hard work on your hands if they're not used to playing bass

Kolanaki , in How are you lemmy peeps?
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

My stomach hurts :(

mke ,

Not that it means much, coming from a stranger on the internet, but I hope you get well soon.

jordanlund ,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

If it lasts/has lasted more than 24 hours, get to a doctor!

I fought bad "heartburn" for 5 days. Turned out, I was having a heart attack. On day 5 the damage was already done and I had to have open heart surgery.

neidu2 Mod , in What was using the internet in the early 2000s like?

It was amazing.

Relevant backstory: I was an introverted kid who grew up on the countryside with not a whole lot in common with my peers. I played football because that's what my "friends" did. I was OK at it, but I never really felt any enthusiasm for it. I only did it because I didn't know of any alternatives. I got along with most people, but I always got the impression that it was only because I was good at playing the part of someone who fit in.

I got my first PC in 1996. It was an outdated 386, but it allowed me to really get into the low level stuff an learn about it beyond the usual gaming aspect, and for that I am grateful. While my peers were more interested in whether their favorite football team would beat their least favorite team in some important and upcoming match, I was more interested in turning our sat TV dish to see what other satellites I could find. Yes, I know there were systems that did this automatically. We didn't have that, but what we did have was a programmable card for decoding D2MAC, thus allowing me to view any TV channel that we received. I don't remember which satellite we normally used, but after some trial and error, as well as looking up something on the internet at a friend's place, I learned that my newly acquired signal was the Astra satellites. This is how I stumbled across Futurama a few years later.

In 1998 I got an up to date PC, and internet access. It was like a whole new world opened before me. Whatever information I wanted was freely available, and finding like-minded ones were easy. I was 15 at a time, and I still wasn't allowed to stay online into the small hours. So I went to bed and pretended to sleep until my parents went to bed, so that I could get up and dial up undisturbed. I live in UTC+1, so this worked well, as most of the people I knew online was in the US. When everyone around me went to bed, my world was just beginning after a full day of pretending to fit in. Between midnight and 6 in the morning, dialup was free, so that's when I could just stay online without having to worry about cost, or whether someone in the house would disconnect me (accidentally or otherwise) by picking up the phone. I dipped my toes into Ultima Online at this time too, but that was only a small part of my online life. In general, by bandwidth was too slow to really do what I do, but there was a whole lot of info, guides, and technical explanations available in .txt format. I also started playing with FreeBSD and slackware linux around this time.

Come 2001 and things were more or less the same, except that I had moved to a rather big city for studies. I got ADSL for the first time, and no longer had to pay for each online minute via dialup. The whooping 2mbit I had all to myself allowed me to start experimenting with running servers and services, in addition to poking and prodding the internet to see what was out there and available (you have no idea how insecure everything was back then).

It didn't take me long to have access to various servers all over, legal or otherwise, so I could pretty much do as I pleased online, as it couldn't be linked to me personally. I never used this access for anything disruptive or destructive. The only time I know that I caused something major was actually purely by accident, lol. I was more like the tapeworm you never knew was there, plus i was more interested in corporate servers. I mostly did it to learn more about how everything fit together.

I had a presence in almost all noteworthy internet communities, and while I wasn't "famous" on the internet, i knew A LOT of people, as most of my life was online. Sure, I met like-minded people in the city, but nowhere close to as many people I knew online. There's a non-zero chance that others in here knew me once upon a time. Hell, it happened on reddit last year where I told an anecdote and someone responded with "Hey, I remember this. Did you go by REDACTED back in the day?"

Due to various reasons, I decided in 2006ish to leave my old internet identity behind for both practical and legal reasons. Partially because that's around the time when the lines between internet identity and real world identity began to blur. But I still miss the days before corporate interest ruined the sense of community one had in these small niche corners of the internet.

Idreamofcheesy , in What was using the internet in the early 2000s like?

The Internet was...Weird. it was way more anonymous and way less centralized. You didn't just check Reddit or Lemmy or YouTube, you had a favorites bar. You would go down the list and check 4 different flash websites, 3 forums, and some news/entertainment article sites.

And friends would constantly tell you new sites you had to check out. And webcomics. You would find a webcomic and read it from the start, then add it to your weekly update list.

It was also peak gross Internet. You would always be wary of links friends would send. Goatse and lemon party were guaranteed to be hiding in one.

Everyone had their favorite flash game site. Simple, one player games that you did just for fun. No achievements or social element besides sharing the link with a friend.

superduperpirate ,

goatse

Found out about that one the hard way in college. Ew.

Idreamofcheesy ,

Consider yourself lucky. I think I was in high school.

I was very relieved when Rick Rolling replaced that trend.

wreckedcarzz ,
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

one player

That one tank game where you took turns against the computer and/or others players begs to differ :P

Idreamofcheesy ,

Oh yeah and there were a handful of multiplayer ones where one player used the left half of the keyboard and the second player used the right half.

And maybe a handful of websites where there was actually a chatroom where you talked with a stranger while you played your shitty flash game.

TheOneCurly , in What was using the internet in the early 2000s like?

I was on the younger side so it was mostly flash game and animation sites. Homestar runner, albinoblacksheep, miniclip, addicting games, runescape.

cybercitizen4 OP ,

We must be around the same age haha because those were staples for me too, I was obsessed with motherload on minclip, RuneScape and age of empires lol

toastboy79 ,

Miniclip and addicting games were so good! Those were simpler times for sure.

also

FIRE ZE MISSILES

Mesophar ,

But I am le tired

PugJesus ,
@PugJesus@lemmy.world avatar

Miniclip - now there's a name I haven't heard in a very long time...

imaqtpie ,
@imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works avatar

Shout out to XGen Studios, who made Motherload along with Stick RPG, Stick Arena, Defend your Castle, etc.

The era of flash games will remain forever goated in my eyes. Nostalgia tinted glasses but I refuse to take them off. This game is also a core memory. I feel bad for kids nowadays, these games were so much fun and 100% free and playable on any computer.

OmegaMouse ,
@OmegaMouse@pawb.social avatar

I used to love the Madness series and that game! There's a game on Steam by the same devs (at least I think it must be the same devs) - https://store.steampowered.com/app/488860/MADNESS_Project_Nexus/

PugJesus , (edited ) in What was using the internet in the early 2000s like?
@PugJesus@lemmy.world avatar

Google could actually find you things.

The first page of searches was almost never brimming with corporate shit, but very Web 1.0 looking niche websites.

Browser based games were all the rage.

Oh God, flash animations. Albino Blacksheep. Our sense of humor was... primitive.

Fuck, webcomics too. They were big back then. And mostly shit, lmao.

Everyone had a blog. Not like modern cookie-cutter blogs, but slapdash HTML pages with unintuitive layouts and garish backgrounds and graphics. 9/10 times that's where super obscure information was. Midi files - god, do kids even know what midi files are anymore?

There were a million fansites for every fandom. No centralization.

There was a much stronger sense of the internet being a unique place, apart from meatspace. Maybe it was just the aftermath of the dotcom bubble busting, but everything was very... open. Communal. People just... freely sharing themselves and their work.

Plum ,
@Plum@lemmy.world avatar

Everyone had a blog.

I'm so glad my Diary-X got irretrievably wiped.

wreckedcarzz ,
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

webmaster

hard drive failure

they are not worthy of the title if they just had one disk and no backups. to be so knowledgeable and yet so stupid is a memorable achievement.

1984 , in Finally on vacation.
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

I'm going in 7 days :)

inlandempire , in Canvas in 30 days 👀
@inlandempire@jlai.lu avatar

Ohhh this is going to be awesome

inlandempire , in Hitting Creative Burnout
@inlandempire@jlai.lu avatar

As others have said, you need to take a step back, and find some rest

I'll also add a thought : creativity comes from your lived experiences, the more you discover new ideas, exchange with new people, understand new cultures, the more matter you'll have at your disposal to pick from when looking for creative solutions to whatever you're working on. Go on holidays, visit a museum, buy a concert ticket, the more you put yourself out there to be available for new experiences, the more creative you'll be.

1984 , in Mondays can be rough. What made you happy last week?
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Set up a nomad cluster behind traefik. Felt excited for several days after getting it all up. :)

It's really weird how these things are fun to me, but for whatever reason, they are...

Servais , in Chinese breakfast; Doughy and savoury
@Servais@dormi.zone avatar

Interesting post, thanks!

jeena OP , in Chinese breakfast; Doughy and savoury
@jeena@jemmy.jeena.net avatar

I edited the post and added what our doughter wrote about her experience too. She gad a very different view on it compared to me.

MacedWindow , in Chinese breakfast; Doughy and savoury
@MacedWindow@lemmy.world avatar

I like the photos you took, the bread looked delicious

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