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HappycamperNZ ,

Id actually bring back the power to pirate.

The amount of effort that has gone into trying to extract every possible stream dollar makes me just wanna fuck the system. I am happy to pay to watch or play something, but pirating is the only way to get it without being ripped, “this is no longer available” or “buy this other platform and make an account”.

Steam and GoG got alot of my money because I could buy what I actually wanted. I would have happily paid for a soap2day app that allowed me to just select and watch stuff. The amount of 90s cartoons I could show the kids…

Roopappy , (edited )

I miss mixed CDs. You meet someone, you understand their music tastes, and you make them a mix of stuff that you think they’d like, but from your favorite known artists. I made plenty, and ones I received got me into some awesome bands.

MrsDoyle ,

There was this Russian website where you could download whole albums for like 50 cents. I absolutely loved it, because as well as current hits it also had the most obscure, crazy stuff, classical music, jazz, and world music. I think they’re all in prison now, the guys who ran it.

LoganNineFingers ,

Memory unlocked.

I definitely know what you’re talking about (dispite not remembering the name of it) but they had everything. And if they didn’t, you could request it and they’d find it.

I miss that site now

eezeebee ,
@eezeebee@lemmy.ca avatar

You can get an entire album or discography now. Back then I remember getting random loose mp3s of artists I was interested in, dictated by how many seeds happened to be online. Not sure I would bring that back, but it did make for some deep cuts becoming my favourite songs and not just the well known “hits” from albums.

The most dramatic change is probably how easy it is to hear any of that music in a legit way, and hear it instantly.

Roopappy ,

I burned CDs just titled “Pink Floyd”, “Beatles” or “Radiohead” with their entire discography of mp3s on it. I really got deep into a lot of bands back then.

taiyang ,

yourpiratedmovie.exe

Thanks, Limewire!

boaratio ,

I used to pirate because I was poor back then. Now that I make a decent living I’m more than happy to pay devs for their hard work.

DeltaTangoLima ,
@DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com avatar

A lot less VCDs and MP3s downloaded from FTP servers and BBSes.

Not sure if I’d bring it back, but I sure do miss the fun of playing Quake against my mates on public servers.

SkaveRat ,

Downloading a movie only to find out it was actually porn.

Or the other way around.

leisesprecher ,

And a whole lot of content that I frankly would have preferred not to have seen.

When you’re 12 and your parents have no idea what you’re doing, you’ll end up in very dark corners.

sexual_tomato ,

Downloading a movie only to find it was the pain Olympics or a cartel/terrorist beheading was also fun

Glide ,

It might be boring and obvious, but the speeds.

I used to have to plan ahead, set overnight downloads, very consciously and actively manage data rates and in general never plan around getting something. Today, I can get basically ANYTHING in less than an hour on FiOp. Most things, 5-10 minutes. Transfer rate has outscaled data size, and it’s fantastic.

Roopappy ,

I remember downloading the big stuff at work, because they had a T1, and network security wasn’t really a thing yet.

rainynight65 ,

I had lots of time to play games, but not a lot of money to buy games.

Now it’s the other way round.

If I could bring back anything from back then, it’s boxed PC games that can be resold and traded. Covered a lot of my gaming needs from second hand shops.

billwashere ,

Ease of grabbing content. There are so many tools that make it too easy and automated. I mean this has changed drastically in the last 10 years let alone 90s.

LarkinDePark ,

I’d bring back my favourite website from the time:

imaginers.com/iw

Started me on a career, with Macromedia’s product line.

SauceBossSmokin ,

Usenet Newsgroups were a big part of my life back then. Games, MP3s, Software, Movies, TV shows. So many Xbox games that I burned to DVD and loaded onto my modded Xbox. Those were the days. Now I only torrent some movies and TV shows thru a VPN and pay for everything else. My time is worth a lot more to me now than back in the late 90s/early 2000s.

aramis87 ,

omg, speed, why has no one said 'speed' yet? An hour-long tv show was 350mb, and it took three days to download.

some_guy , (edited )

Agreed. I can now download a multi-terabyte file in a matter of minutes or even less.

BeigeAgenda ,
@BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca avatar

Wow multi-terabyte in minutes! There are not many ISPs delivering 100Gbps and even fewer are delivering 1000Gbps.

Unless you live on top of a data center.

some_guy ,

Whoops typing while walking through a lobby and obviously had a brain bork. My mistake. GB.

PetteriPano ,
@PetteriPano@lemmy.world avatar

One of the local secondary schools had a mailserver. No one knew or took security seriously in the mid-to-late nineties. As a result, it also hosted an ftp-server with widely shared credentials that held some 20GB worth of mp3s when it was shut down after three years in service. It was one of the biggest in the country at the time.

Irc and DCC-transfers were huge, too. As CD-writers became common place, a lot of it took place over snail mail or sneakernet. A guy at school had printed lists of all his tunes and took orders to burn them to music CDs.

I think the limited selection and limited transfers/storage made you cherish things more. Today you’ll never finish your library in your lifetime.

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