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  3. What's a process where you prefer the old way of doing things instead of how it's done now?

What's a process where you prefer the old way of doing things instead of how it's done now?

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  • Y [email protected]

    Bro, I had dial up in the early nineties...

    D This user is from outside of this forum
    D This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by
    #159

    I do not miss dial up.

    Y 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • setsneedtofeed@lemmy.worldS [email protected]

      I do miss physically owning media. A lot of physical media still decays, though, so not a panacea.

      I prefer digital media that is locally stored. Many complaints I see about digital media revolves around DRM or a service's ability to remove media that you think you "own".

      I think locally stored media solves that without taking us back to the days of a shelf of hundreds of DVDs.

      I do own some physical media like certain very old PC games but only because there is no good digital option available that's more convenient.

      rob_t_firefly@lemmy.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
      rob_t_firefly@lemmy.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote last edited by
      #160

      I use locally stored digital media, but I still love my shelves of DVDs, CDs, and paper books. The CDs get ripped to FLAC and mostly left on the shelf thereafter, but I do still enjoy taking a movie off the shelf and loading it into the player.

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      • J [email protected]

        What is the point of tubeless tyres on bicycles ?

        They're rock hard to put on, then you have to add sealant otherwise they leak.

        Because of the beading and the sealant they are much heavier, and rotational weight is the worst sort of weight.

        People say they don't get punctures, but that's because of reinforcing, you can get tube tyres with reinforcing so what is the benefit ?

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        wrote last edited by
        #161

        Most users of tubeless tires I know ride mountain bikes and on pretty aggressive trails. As the other comment stated it’s not about avoiding punctures all together but they are significantly easier to repair and ride through.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • B [email protected]

          Subway still tastes good but holy shit the price bumps the last couple of years, I just can't justify it

          U This user is from outside of this forum
          U This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote last edited by
          #162

          Yeah, those are painful too, but it's hardly just Subway. All food has gone way up in price in recent years. It sucks.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • C [email protected]

            It grinds my gears that programs are called 'apps' now. On phones it was normalized immediately, so, sure. Computers run programs, though, god dammit.

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            wrote last edited by
            #163

            Greetings program!!!

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • M [email protected]

              Software engineering.

              Back in my day(™), it was an engineering role, where science reigned. Anyone even attempting "vibe coding" would've been rightfully laughed out of the room.

              It's a task that should take concerted effort, with specific goals and performance metrics in mind. Just getting the task done wasn't and shouldn't be good enough.

              M This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote last edited by
              #164

              I think the issue is that back then, you only did important things with software. Now there is so much code doing the same simple things. Like how many ways does a person need to input thier birthday... and every tool we use.. if it is good it gets more and more expensive, and more and more cluttered as they try to expand thier market. So now a new cheaper tool that does the same thing gets written. I would bet 90 some % of code is copies of other code with scientifically meaningless difference. But someone has to write it all...

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneI [email protected]
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                wrote last edited by
                #165

                Programming. Telling a machine "build x feature" is nervewracking because I do not know what it's doing and more importantly boring because it takes all the joy out of writing code. Even the LLM completions I do not use because I have seen what it has done to my coworkers' brains. I will think about the problem. I will write the code. I will know what it does. It will be of me, not of some averaging machine.

                May the LLM era end in darkness and the gnashing of teeth amen.

                B 1 Reply Last reply
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                • interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneI [email protected]
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                  wrote last edited by
                  #166

                  Ventrillo / Teamspeak > > > Discord

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • N [email protected]

                    Photography. Film was so advanced, having a layer for each major colour, every film stock has a different feeling. The only downside was cost, but you only took a picture when you were sure it is a good picture. Now we have tons of digital garbage because we take 100 pictures at once.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #167

                    The old family picture books had so much value, now I can't remember if I ever even looked at any past photos I took with my phone, it's all just digital waste now

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneI [email protected]

                      I want a phone where I am able to reach the top and the bottom of the screen without shifting my grip. Also being able to comfortably store in a pocket would be nice

                      B This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote last edited by
                      #168

                      And less weight and no camera cluster sticking out making the phone not lay flat when put down would be nice

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                      • grasshopper_mouse@lemmy.worldG [email protected]

                        One of the many reasons I'll hang onto my 2012 Toyota Corolla until I drive it into the ground. It has a touch screen for just the radio and Bluetooth, but it must be some sort of gen one prototype because it's pretty awful. Thankfully, everything else is tactile. I can't imagine giving it up.

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #169

                        Fwiw, I've just got a '22 corolla and everything has a physical button. I love it.

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                        • interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneI [email protected]
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                          wrote last edited by
                          #170

                          Fixing a car.

                          I'd much, much rather twist some carburetor screws or replace a fuse than have to try to troubleshoot some encrypted CANBUS acceleration sensor that is required for my suspension to work properly.

                          R 2 Replies Last reply
                          4
                          • N [email protected]

                            Photography. Film was so advanced, having a layer for each major colour, every film stock has a different feeling. The only downside was cost, but you only took a picture when you were sure it is a good picture. Now we have tons of digital garbage because we take 100 pictures at once.

                            C This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote last edited by
                            #171

                            Film is crazy advanced. One of those "how did humanity figure this out?" kind of things. Smarter Every Day YouTube channel did a thorough tour of Kodak and it's pretty fascinating all that goes into it.

                            The deliberate act of shooting that the financial and time cost definitely makes better photos. You can do that with digital as well but it takes more discipline. Far easier to shoot a dozen and hope one works than to think and come up with the right one from the start.

                            Both have their place I think. Any time I shoot a race, wedding, or a once in a life trip I'm so glad it's digital! Being able to do a 10 shot burst and nail the facial expression is pretty awesome. Then slowing down and going on a local hike and setting up my 4x5 to take one shot, or a photo walk around town with an old SLR is a blast too.

                            Maybe I just like photography?

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                            • interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneI [email protected]
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                              wrote last edited by
                              #172

                              Shaving with a double edged razor rather than a cartridge one.
                              The whole process is much more meditative and rewarding when you actually focus on the moment and take the time to do it properly. Gives a better shave too.

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • W [email protected]

                                Says the Luddite without an argument...

                                abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
                                abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote last edited by
                                #173

                                Because I'm not arguing, genius, because a group of people that categorically reject all dissent as an appeal to nature fallacy is a group not worth engaging.

                                W 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • setsneedtofeed@lemmy.worldS [email protected]

                                  Contrast paints are a new formulation that's gotten popular in the market. They are like a glaze with wash properties. The idea is that you can simply paint them over a white priming and you're done, all the shading is done for you.

                                  I find the average results I see in real life to be underwhelming. The colors can often be patchy especially if applied to large flat surfaces like for example Space Marine armor. What is more is that contrast paints only contain one shade of pigment and the darker or lighter portions on the model just relate to pigment concentration. I prefer to shade and highlight by adding different colors to the base paint. I find that it offers more control and greater range over the colors. The control relates also to how highlights are placed. Many people either skip them entirely by relying on contrast paint, or they copy the modern GW Box Art style which highlights pretty much every single hard edge rather than trying to give the impression of a light source. I like to give the impression of a light source.

                                  For traditional touches, blacklining is a practice of tracing a thinned black or near black paint on the borders of different objects of the mini to help give them definition. This can be especially important when painting in bright and saturated color schemes to keep them from assaulting the eyes with too much brightness.

                                  I underpaint, which is related to mixing for shading but means to paint certain areas a particular color in preparation for another color to support it. For example Caucasian skin is usually a red-brown or purple before the first actual flesh tones go on.

                                  Sometimes it's just things I consider absolutely basic like basing a mini at all in any way. All I my minis are based with texture in some way (any you see in my history that don't have basing texture were specifically requested such by other people) and have at least basic drybrushing or flock. A lot of people just paint the bases now, or simply just leave them bare.

                                  I also like putting segmented colors, camo patterns, or other simple freehanding on minis. This draws a lot of attention in real life as many people are so used to just contrast painting that they never learn fine control and as such never even attempt freehand.

                                  I do have a few paper copies of older painting books I reference along with various PDF scans. All the the exact paint recommendations are out of date, but the general concepts are still valid.

                                  I partially blame army bloat and the FOMO treadmill in Warhammer 40k for creating unmanageably large armies that cause people to treat the painting as a chore to be finished with rather than something to enjoy and get better at.

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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #174

                                  Oh! Ok so I'm totally out of the loop on contrast paints, I paint(ed) with many of the same techniques you do, but less advanced. I would prime usually with a black undercoat and then do my base colors, then I'd do detail work and finish with washes, dry brushing, and mixed color highlights. I didn't realize there was another way to go lol. I never got good enough to try and really work from a light source perspective but I was aware of the technique, but mixing paints was a chore because of how slow I was so my shit would be constantly drying up so I didn't do a huge amount of different shades, just a few, which limited my ability to gradually lighten stuff up. Also I sucked at getting my mixes right/consistent.

                                  Your minis look great, better than mine ever did and I'm sure you're MUCH faster than I was. I really took a long time because I didn't like them looking sloppy and I worked mostly using the games workshop kit I started with, along with one or two other brushes I bought without any real education, and some more paints. At the time I learned techniques from the GW books and some old forums. I was always surprised by the lack of effort people put into painting their minis but I guess people were rushing because they wanted an army and didn't want to get crap for fielding unpainted sets (or bad luck).

                                  I think some of my favorite work was actually the terrain pieces I made. I think I have a really good eye for weird bits and bobs and garbage that looks great as detail for terrain more than I ever was at painting technique.

                                  In general even though my painting was slow I didn't think it was a chore, my struggle was finding folks that I enjoyed playing with. I lived in a small town with a single games shop, they did an open mini game day 2x a month but the people that showed up were just not fun to play with, the worst kinds of stereotypical neckbeardy folks and I don't mind me a good nerd but gross obnoxious assholes suck whether they're nerds or not. I know it's much easier to find folks these days than it was in the 90s but it's a discarded hobby for the time being, life is too busy and I do miss it but it's on the shelf for another phase of life, for now.

                                  Thanks for taking the time to explain. I doubt I'd get into contrast painting either, your description of the downsides sounds like the benefits wouldn't outweigh the pace.

                                  I think I have some (really) old 40k minis I saved somewhere, if I run into them in my garage I'll snap some pictures and reply in another post.

                                  Happy painting!

                                  setsneedtofeed@lemmy.worldS 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA [email protected]

                                    Because I'm not arguing, genius, because a group of people that categorically reject all dissent as an appeal to nature fallacy is a group not worth engaging.

                                    W This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #175

                                    Sounds like a self-defeating argument. So glad I could stand by while you beat on that straw man for a while. Feeling better after that li'l display, champ?

                                    abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • W [email protected]

                                      Sounds like a self-defeating argument. So glad I could stand by while you beat on that straw man for a while. Feeling better after that li'l display, champ?

                                      abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
                                      abbotsbury@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #176

                                      Again, not an argument. You sure seem to be projecting about strawmen.

                                      W 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • D [email protected]

                                        I do not miss dial up.

                                        Y This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Y This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #177

                                        Why did they want us to hear the handshake‽ Like there's no reason we all would be able to pitch perfectly recreate a noise we haven't heard in two decades.

                                        D 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • H [email protected]

                                          Programming. Telling a machine "build x feature" is nervewracking because I do not know what it's doing and more importantly boring because it takes all the joy out of writing code. Even the LLM completions I do not use because I have seen what it has done to my coworkers' brains. I will think about the problem. I will write the code. I will know what it does. It will be of me, not of some averaging machine.

                                          May the LLM era end in darkness and the gnashing of teeth amen.

                                          B This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #178

                                          You sound like a C developer complaining about interpreted languages lol

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