Think about what today is considered next level vs what it used to be
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I mean, it's still pretty dope.
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I think that's a ps3 to the left of the TV
wrote last edited by [email protected]Oh, I was thinking this was late 90's setup, but if that's a PS3 then it's like 10 years later... but isn't that just like a book or something?
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Up to this day this is still next level. Seriously flat screen was an improvement but it ended up with people growing up TV size to a scale that is certainly not an improvement. Image quality has gotten better but what is the point of me seeing more detail in TV than in real life?
what is the point of me seeing more detail in TV than in real life?
It'll be bigger than my brother-in-law's TV.
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I think that's a ps3 to the left of the TV
I disagree, that looks like a record player. You can see the plastic cover and what looks like part of the plate on top. There's also a VCR and I doubt there were many instances of PS3s and VCRs being plugged into the same CRT. I don't doubt it happened, but this is giving more late 90s/early 2000s than mid/late 2000s
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I just took this photo. Is my setup next level? I RGB modded the Sony if it helps.
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I think that's a ps3 to the left of the TV
It’s definitely a record player and not a PS3
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Twenty-seven years ago that 27 inch TV was huge!
Those TVs were in a lot of middle class homes. I think huge is pretty exaggerated. Having a house on the block with those 4 person 40-50 in TV's was pretty common in a lot of areas IMO.
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Now most people need massive TVs, but still spend most of the time looking at the small screen on the phone.
Because unless you're buying a quality panel the difference between a 45 inch and 65 is usually $150. For something that you need 3 or 4 of (tops, if you have a family or large house) that'll last 5+ years, the value proposition is high enough to spend the extra money.
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Those TVs were in a lot of middle class homes. I think huge is pretty exaggerated. Having a house on the block with those 4 person 40-50 in TV's was pretty common in a lot of areas IMO.
They weren’t huge at all. They were huge for that day.
Sure there was 40+ inch tvs if you were willing to shell out 10k plus.
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I just took this photo. Is my setup next level? I RGB modded the Sony if it helps.
wrote last edited by [email protected]That a RetroPie setup at the bottom left?
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That a RetroPie setup at the bottom left?
I think it's a MiSTer.
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They weren’t huge at all. They were huge for that day.
Sure there was 40+ inch tvs if you were willing to shell out 10k plus.
Not that expensive at all.
In the 90s you could get a 40in for maybe like $500.
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I just took this photo. Is my setup next level? I RGB modded the Sony if it helps.
Sweet man, that setup right there is next level!
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Thrift stores couldn't sell those cabinets 10 years ago and now they won't take them at all.
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I just took this photo. Is my setup next level? I RGB modded the Sony if it helps.
What's the CRT on the bottom left?
Also yes.
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I’m old enough to remember when this was peak entertainment technology.
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Not that expensive at all.
In the 90s you could get a 40in for maybe like $500.
$500 in the 90s would be equivalent to around $1000 today. That's a very expensive TV and more than I've spent on displays in total across my adult life (which includes some nice IPS computer displays)
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It still is next level. Modern setups aren't nearly as cool. TVs mounted to the wall, game consoles on the floor, and who even has a dedicated stereo system anymore?
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I just took this photo. Is my setup next level? I RGB modded the Sony if it helps.
No Saturn?
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Thrift stores couldn't sell those cabinets 10 years ago and now they won't take them at all.
I've got one at my son's place we need to get rid of. I probably should just get the sawzall and have him dispose over time