• Gloomy@mander.xyz
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    2 years ago

    Insects. At night there would be plenty of insects under every singe street lamp. The windscreen would be full of yellow goo after driving in summer.

  • DjMeas@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    To continue installing a game you had to type in the 7th word found on page 16, paragraph 3 on line 4.

      • Hildegarde@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Old anti piracy measure.

        Games were on floppies and could be copied trivially. Games also came with a printed instruction manual. If you bought it, you’d have the manual. If you’re just playing a copy you wouldn’t. So type one word from a specific page so we know you own the game.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Games used to come with books to read, and their anti-piracy measure was to give you a page number and tell you to enter the first word on the page to activate the software.

    Of course, you’d copy that floppy and write the code word on the label for your friends.

    • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      IIRC, it was Greg Norman’s Shark Attack that had a thing where it would give you a small pixel art picture of the top-down view of a golf course, and you had to go through the game manual and enter in what page that golf course picture appeared on… so we just got a photocopy version of the manual

    • Malfeasant@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Lol I had one like that - I made a copy for a friend, but it wasn’t just one code word, it could be any one of about a hundred - but he was dedicated, he figured it out somehow over the course of a few weeks.

    • oatscoop@midwest.social
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      2 years ago

      You could copy the manual on a xerox machine. Of course some publishers were smart and printed the manual in such a way it any copies came out as an illegibly dark mess.

      So naturally you took a legitimate manual, manually transcribed it, and made copies of the copy.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    This station now concludes its broadcast day.

    That’s right. At a certain time of night, TV stations would just stop showing things until morning.

    • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Oh man, I still remember when Windows finally powered your computer off when you shut down. My poor Nana spent half an hour trying to turn off my uncle’s computer because she kept hitting the power button just after that showed up (as was tradition) but after the computer transitioned to power off, so it just kept turning on.

  • thechadwick@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Flying being a really fun and nice experience.

    You could walk your family members/friends right to the gate without going through any screening. As a bonus, everyone wore shoes and not their worst clothes too.

    My first flight I was by myself before I was even a teenager yet, and the airline had a specific flight attendant watch after me until my grandparents picked me up on the other side. She was awesome and I kept the flight wings the captain gave me for decades. It was not unusually good customer service.

    In fact, before MBAs McKinsey’d the world, interactions at most businesses were actually pleasant… Nearly every restaurant or store actually cared about customer satisfaction in the before times. I can’t tell you how nice that was having a social contract. It was a genuinely nice thing (*racial and gender provisions apply, offer not valid in all areas) Instead of expanding the umbrella to everyone, we drained the public pools and now it’s normal…

  • MiDaBa@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    When you call someone it was normal for someone else to answer and you had to be careful because they could be listening to your call.

    • InputZero@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Party lines! You’d share your phone line with one or more other households. When the phone rang they all rang with alternating short-long rings to identify which house on the line the caller intended to call. So if someone calls you at 2am, several of your neighbors know about it because their phones rang too. Even better, being a snot nosed kid I knew how to take a set of headphones and clip them onto the line. You’d hear both sides of the conversation of any house on the party line without dropping the call voltage too much and getting caught. That meant no one talked about anything private on the phone, everyone else could be listening.

  • ObsidianZed@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago
    • Receiving junk mail Internet CDs
    • Waiting patiently to record a song you liked
    • Setting the clock and a timer to record something on your VCR
    • The planet Pluto
    • Wax lips and candy cigarettes
    • Tang
    • Translucent electronics
    • Cheat Code books
    • 1(800) COLLECT & “00 it’s magic!”
  • myusernameis@lemmy.ca
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    2 years ago

    Buying the car kit so I could connect my CD Walkman (with 15 second ESP) to the cigarette lighter and cassette deck in my first car.