software is a mirror that reflects the times and the environment it was created in.
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@psf@oldbytes.space literally the worst take ive read all day, shit sucked then too!!!!
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@psf@oldbytes.space literally the worst take ive read all day, shit sucked then too!!!!
@psf@oldbytes.space go meet non general purpose programmers for the love of god
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@psf@oldbytes.space go meet non general purpose programmers for the love of god
@psf@oldbytes.space or just read microserfs or literally any sociological text
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@psf@oldbytes.space or just read microserfs or literally any sociological text
@jack thanks for giving me the opportunity to clarify my take, because the "past good, future bad" framing was probably the weakest part of it.
my actual point is that software is the product of its environment. software created in a repressive environment reflects the greed and paranoia of its creators.
there are plenty of examples of this in the past; Microsoft were greedy and paranoid, David Ahl and the Creative Computing crew weren't, and when you use their software, the difference is stark. today there is still plenty of software (usually FOSS) that hasn't been dragged down by extractive greed. however, pretty much all of the dominant players have succumbed to the perverse calling of adtech and data brokerage. there are people entering the field today who have never seen a website without targeted ads, an operating system without always-on telemetry, or a video game without microtransactions, and it's mainly #retrocomputing heads who are in the position to point out these thing are a product of the fucked up environment we live in, not an inherent trait of software, and that we can do better when creating new software.
put another way, retrocomputing is the most interesting to me when it isn't just based on blind nostalgia for the past, but instead focuses on understanding what past systems Got Right and what use we can still make of them today.
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software is a mirror that reflects the times and the environment it was created in.
this is why much software created in the 1970s counterculture was joyful and humanistic, and why much software created in the 2020s capitalistic hellscape is soul-crushing malware (adware, spyware).
#retrocomputing can mean celebrating hardware limitations and creative coding, but it can also mean celebrating personal computing - computers that are tools for liberation - bicycles for the mind, not cattle trains to the slop farm.
@psf Also, the War On Drugs shifting the pattern of popular programming chemicals towards those whose users would be happier to vote for Nixon might have been a factor, especially if one considers What the Dormouse Said a creditable source.
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