• 2 Posts
  • 9 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 22nd, 2023

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  • I mean, I’m not going off a belief, I actually lived this.

    Yes, the clear reception vs bunny ears was awesome, but that was also limited on televisions like this, and I’m talking specifically about the content.

    My family were always early adopters of technology (I started gaming in ‘79 with both the Intellivision and Atari – Intellivision was far superior). We had HBO, Cinemax, and Showtime as soon as they were available.

    I’m talking about the late 70s and early 80s when they were commercially available to the masses and the cable wars began.

    The late 70s were absolutely the early days of commercial cable tv.


  • In the early days they didn’t; that was the whole point of them. You paid a subscription specifically not to have ads like free broadcast television did.

    It only lasted like a decade, but it was their whole selling point.

    e: keep in mind, too, that broadcast tv at the time was where all the good content was. HBO only showed movies that had already been in theatres (thus the name Home Box Office) and Showtime’s hook was soft-core porn. There wasn’t the dearth of original shows/movies we have now. They weren’t studios back then.


  • Barkeeper’s Friend is a miracle, but people should know it’s incredibly abrasive and can debride enamelware. I ruined a pan’s outer finish because that didn’t occur to me, using it to get carbonisation off the bottom.

    It’s brilliant for raw metal and glass cooktops, though. When I bought my house, the previous owners left a kit for the glass cooktop including the razor tool in your OP. I’m so grateful they did because I wouldn’t have known.

    e: can’t spell


  • I’m old enough to remember when HBO’s entire point was you paid for cable so you wouldn’t have ads. That was their business model.

    Then sometime in the late 80s or early 90s (I dunno, that decade’s kind of a blur) they started sneaking ads in between shows, but not in the middle of shows. But you were paying a higher price, with a few ads. Then they started showing ads to everyone, and still making you pay. I’m still salty about that.

    This was always going to happen. They’ll compound paying PLUS ads, and you’ll like it, because what choice do you have if all services are doing it?

    Fuck them all . 🏴‍☠️

    e: massively borked that first sentence



  • LillyPip@lemmy.worldtolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldUpdates
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    1 year ago

    Uh, what? Have you owned a Mac in the last 30 years?

    That’s not how it works. I’ve had two macs in the last 20 years, and more than a dozen Windows machines. I had to reformat the Windows PCs every year or so for various reasons until they became obsolete after like 5 years, but my macs have worked for 10 years each with no issues, and always upgraded to the latest OS easily and always for free. Both my macs lasted 10+ years of heavy use (my current one is 5+ years and still young).

    Every time a Windows update came out it was an ordeal and I dreaded it; with each update I’d start looking at the cost of replacing the whole machine in case it bricks and it’s just not worth fixing things. Mac updates are barely a blip in my workflow.

    Adobe projects that can’t be accessed on a workstation not running Monterrey or whatever

    This makes zero sense. The Adobe suite runs much better on OSX than Windows by orders of magnitude, even on outdated and non-updated OS. There’s a reason most designers and professional VXers have always preferred Mac. (eta: also, rereading, this makes even less sense because Adobe projects don’t care about your OS when opening; just the version of Adobe itself. You can easily open projects made on a whole different OS: Windows/OSX with no problem. You’re either mistaken here or being deliberately dishonest for some reason.)

    I’ve been in IT/software development and VX design for a few decades and I’m really wondering how this is an ordeal for you. It makes no sense to me. My 3000 dollar laptop has outlasted 5 1000 dollar windows machines. You get what you pay for.

    e: some words were cut

    Also, in my few decades in the industry, the sales and marketing staff always ran Windows, but the design staff usually worked on Mac. That speaks for itself.