What's a process where you prefer the old way of doing things instead of how it's done now?
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It was truly exciting to look forward to a weekly show on TV.
Except when you couldn't know in advance when your show skipped a week and they had to play some crappy rerun of a completely different show.
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I prefer D&D 3.5e over all revisions.
Shadowrun 3E is so much better in so many ways, not least of which is that the "Wireless World" additions make hacking so boring and easy compared to how it worked prior. Don't even need a party
Physical controls are better than touch sensitive controls.
Wireless controllers last way longer when you can turn off the vibration, speakers, microphones, lights and other things that don't NEED to be there to control something (but I do like adaptive triggers when not just used as a secondary vibration motor; clicky tension feedback for shooting guns feels awesome tho).
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What was "the old way we did things" before social media?
I'd like to shout from the mountaintop that I do not care what you and your boring family did over the holidays.
I don't remember the last time I logged into any real social media account so I guess I'm kind of living as though it doesn't exist anyway.
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Dating. It's hard to manufacture that initial spark in an app.
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I prefer pressing buttons and turning nobs in the car.
It's actually safer to have tactile buttons, too.
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This is kind of niche, but I mix concerts for a living and newer consoles and shows are all scene based, every song has a scene, and most of the time every verse and chorus in the song has a sub scene. It is a breath of fresh air to be able to mix with no scenes and have to rely on pure skill and intuition. Those shows tend to have a better feel and be more energetic, albeit less polished. They are also more fun, and a little bit more stressful.
Cool. I had no idea this was a thing.
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Dumb phones. I've grown to hate smartphones, apps, and all that goes with them.
Every app is harvesting my "data", and every website is bloated to shit.
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Paper boarding tickets and having someone who works for an airline actually be able to help you directly when something goes wrong.
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TV.
I hate the smart-TV workflow, its a terrible user experience: Turn the TV on... wait for the smart-TV OS to load... land on an app menu... navigate around and choose an app... wait for the app to load... select a profile... wait for the list of shows to load... scroll almost endlessly through shows... choose a show, finally... wait for the video to load...
I miss when you turned the TV on and it was just instantly playing whatever channel you last had on, with one single interaction. I miss not having to make the conscious choice of what to watch and feel overwhelmed by so many options. I miss TV programs being a common experience, like an event, that everyone would be talking about together the next day, instead of everyone watching their own thing on their own schedule.
On the plus side people with jobs other than 9-5 can now be included in the experience.
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Dumb phones. I've grown to hate smartphones, apps, and all that goes with them.
You can honestly use a smartphone pretty similarly to a dumbphone.
It's your choice to use apps that aren't email, text messaging, phone, or gps. Nobody is forcing you to use them.
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spelling it as "catsup" — the other way looks so juvenile, like "nite lite" instead of night light
Catsup and ketchup are two different things.
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TV.
I hate the smart-TV workflow, its a terrible user experience: Turn the TV on... wait for the smart-TV OS to load... land on an app menu... navigate around and choose an app... wait for the app to load... select a profile... wait for the list of shows to load... scroll almost endlessly through shows... choose a show, finally... wait for the video to load...
I miss when you turned the TV on and it was just instantly playing whatever channel you last had on, with one single interaction. I miss not having to make the conscious choice of what to watch and feel overwhelmed by so many options. I miss TV programs being a common experience, like an event, that everyone would be talking about together the next day, instead of everyone watching their own thing on their own schedule.
If you haven't used free Over-the-air TV these days you might be surprised that most cities have a few dozen channels of live TV right now. If your in a large metro area get the simplest of cheapest TV antennas, plug it into your TV, and do a channel scan. You'll be surprised how many channels there are now.
If you're in suburbs or rural, you'll still likely have quite a few but may need a more substantial antenna.
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I've never brought a computer/laptop to class in uni except when I needed to do a presentation. I vastly prefer to take notes by hand because I find that I retain info much better. And I'm a massive doodler. I'm pretty pen and paper playing ttrpgs as well.
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I prefer pressing buttons and turning nobs in the car.
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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Agreed. I have ADHD and need that tactile feedback to commit things to memory.
The only downside is that I can type so much faster than I can write by Hans.
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Anything to do with the internet. I'd go back to 2010 in a heartbeat.
I'd prefer to go back to an internet pre-YouTube where the Internet started to become corporate.
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If you haven't used free Over-the-air TV these days you might be surprised that most cities have a few dozen channels of live TV right now. If your in a large metro area get the simplest of cheapest TV antennas, plug it into your TV, and do a channel scan. You'll be surprised how many channels there are now.
If you're in suburbs or rural, you'll still likely have quite a few but may need a more substantial antenna.
I do have an antenna and get some decent channels with it
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I prefer pressing buttons and turning nobs in the car.
My old civic is so nice.
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Dating. It's hard to manufacture that initial spark in an app.
Lack of third places has been a real thorn in society, especially third places that you aren't expected to spend money.
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I like old timey radio (dramas like Twilight Zone, etc...Bob Dylan had a cool modern retro show, also stuff like Coast to Coast with Art Bell) but never listen to modern radio basically ever. Used to be much more magical.
The closest I've found is sound booth theature and the dungeon crawler Karl series. So good.