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Vintage Computer Festival Midwest (Chicago)
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2024-03-14 at 7:12 PM UTC
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2024-03-14 at 8:29 PM UTCI always see these things and think they’re cool to check out, computer history museum was fun for an hour or two, but I don’t think I’ll ever understand people who spend hella time and money on retro computers. God bless them because I get some enjoyment out of being a spectator, but if I wanted to work with really shitty old hardware I’d just do embedded programming for something that’s still manufactured, or fire up a mips emulator or something.
I get it a bit more for like old consoles or general computers that had worthwhile games, but sometimes it’s these old ass IBM machines that just do payroll, or did industrial job control, and I just don’t see what you get out of refurbishing something like that. It’s like spending a year fixing up a 1995 Toyota Corolla.
Constraints inspire creativity and all that, but there are cheaper constraints you could impose and actually get something out of. -
2024-03-14 at 9:37 PM UTC
Originally posted by Lanny I always see these things and think they’re cool to check out, computer history museum was fun for an hour or two, but I don’t think I’ll ever understand people who spend hella time and money on retro computers. God bless them because I get some enjoyment out of being a spectator, but if I wanted to work with really shitty old hardware I’d just do embedded programming for something that’s still manufactured, or fire up a mips emulator or something.
I get it a bit more for like old consoles or general computers that had worthwhile games, but sometimes it’s these old ass IBM machines that just do payroll, or did industrial job control, and I just don’t see what you get out of refurbishing something like that. It’s like spending a year fixing up a 1995 Toyota Corolla.
Constraints inspire creativity and all that, but there are cheaper constraints you could impose and actually get something out of.
Why would you have to fix a 1995 Toyota Corolla?
And old computers smell nice. -
2024-03-20 at 10:11 AM UTCIf uxdont come pick up this pc when u go fona ima sperg out
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2024-03-20 at 10:15 AM UTCCUM CABLE
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2024-03-20 at 10:16 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 10:44 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 10:47 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 10:57 AM UTCguns gold girls
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2024-03-20 at 10:58 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 11:09 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 11:11 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 11:12 AM UTCDREADFULLY REDUCTIVE
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2024-03-20 at 11:14 AM UTC
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2024-03-20 at 6:19 PM UTC
Originally posted by Lanny I always see these things and think they’re cool to check out, computer history museum was fun for an hour or two, but I don’t think I’ll ever understand people who spend hella time and money on retro computers. God bless them because I get some enjoyment out of being a spectator, but if I wanted to work with really shitty old hardware I’d just do embedded programming for something that’s still manufactured, or fire up a mips emulator or something.
I get it a bit more for like old consoles or general computers that had worthwhile games, but sometimes it’s these old ass IBM machines that just do payroll, or did industrial job control, and I just don’t see what you get out of refurbishing something like that. It’s like spending a year fixing up a 1995 Toyota Corolla.
Constraints inspire creativity and all that, but there are cheaper constraints you could impose and actually get something out of.
It's more a reconnecting, nostalgia thing than a practical one. People want to relive the days when it was a much simpler time. -
2024-03-20 at 7:01 PM UTC