YaksDC ,
@YaksDC@lemm.ee avatar

You’ll have to wait until Monday to be able to take out some cash.

Shardikprime ,

Macdonalds and burger king Pokemon toys were actually of decent quality

Mishmash2000 ,
@Mishmash2000@lemmy.nz avatar

When you turned the TV on you had to wait a minute for it to ‘warm up’. The black and white image would slowly emerge out of the darkness.

Shardikprime ,

And then it made that “warm up” sound, like a “klank!” Or something clicking inside the tv

root_beer ,

Bullshit they could work on channel 4 too; the NES and the SNES both had a switch in the back for that, I assume the Genesis and TurboGrafx16 did too

Shrubs ,

IRQ 5, DMA 1

ElmarsonTheThird ,

I don’t know what exactly that means but I know there was no sound without it. Guess I’m slightly younger.

Shardikprime ,

BLESSED THE DAY PLUG AND PLAY WAS INVENTED

Demuniac ,

Being subscribed to a service that brought about a dozen magazines every week that we would rent including Donald duck, gossip magazines, etc. Sometimes getting to sneak the ‘adult’ one to the bathroom and spend some quality time there.

DudeImMacGyver ,

There was no world wide web.

ObviouslyNotBanana ,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Tamagotchi and a Walkman with skip protection

CeruleanRuin ,

Using two VCRs to edit a video project for English class.

SteveDinn ,
@SteveDinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Using pencils to manually rewind cassette tapes.

SteveDinn ,
@SteveDinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Actually, just having to rewind things at all.

ThunderclapSasquatch ,

I would just flip to the other side, that way it rewound itself

sag OP , (edited )
@sag@lemm.ee avatar

LOL I am just 17 but I still have did that.

Simon ,

“Mom I’m playing Starcraft don’t pick up the phone!”

SleepWithLocalMi ,

Most of the army is halluc

cantstopthesignal ,

I referred to Jennifer Connolly as Stifler’s mom and this zoomer gave me a blank stare.

ShortFuse ,

Maybe because you meant Jennifer Coolidge.

CeruleanRuin ,

If I wanted to talk to someone who wasn’t in the same location as me, I had to know the ten digit number assigned to them.

Malfeasant ,

If they were in the same city, you only needed 7…

teddy2021 ,

Using floppy disks in grade 2, then dvd+r in grade 4 and finally flash drives in 6+

state_electrician ,

That seems an odd progression. I used 5.25" floppy disks from grade 3 to grade 6, when I switched to 3.5" floppies. DVD came around my final years of school in the mid 90s and USB flash drives didn’t become widespread until the early 2000s, when I was already at uni. I remember Star Wars Dark Forces being the first game I got for my first DVD drive and that came out in 1995. I got a DVDR the next year with money we stole from the school. Me and two friends shared one DVDR because they were still so expensive.

teddy2021 ,

By the time they had switched to dvds for me, you couldn’t find floppies at normal school supply stores anymore. As for the dvdrs, my parents ended up buying a pack of them and using them throughout mine and my sisters’ elementary school careers, though I think fully half ended up being used by me to burn playlists from lime/frostwire onto. Those were the days.

AdrianTheFrog ,
@AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world avatar

I actually know what this means, from getting my mom’s Atari to work on my grandmother’s TV

I think it was channel 2 for that one though, idk. We switched to using the flatscreen because of the annoying high pitched noise. (To the annoyance of all retro gamers who read this)

CeruleanRuin , (edited )

It was channel 4 for us, because channel 3 was the local CBS affiliate and it would interfere with the signal from the NES. There was a switch on the console to flip between 3 and 4, because it varied depending on location which channel was optimal.

Channel 3 was CBS, 5 was ABC, 12 was NBC, and that was it.

The ABC affiliate would also broadcast Sesame Street because for most of my childhood, we didn’t have a local public television station. When we finally did get one, you had to get cable to pick it up where I lived. I have vague memories of having cable in the house for a brief time around the time the ABC station stopped carrying the show, but my parents dropped it pretty soon afterward when we started to want to watch exclusively Nickelodeon. At least I always assumed that was the cause, but the cost of cable was probably a bigger factor. They compensated for that by recording movies that came on network TV with the VCR, and we happily rewatched those constantly instead of whatever we were missing on cable. We had whole shelves full of just VHS tapes full of movies recorded off the TV.

creditCrazy ,
@creditCrazy@lemmy.world avatar

Idk why my mind went to the snes satiliview thing where they had a satellite broadcast your game in a way it was kinda like the first live service game

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