VivienM wrote on 2024-12-06, 00:30:And that's a big part of the point. Yes, if you were older and/or had the good fortune of having a parent who worked in technolo […]
Show full quote
Jo22 wrote on 2024-12-05, 18:22: The technology was there, just not so mainstream yet.
And that's a big part of the point. Yes, if you were older and/or had the good fortune of having a parent who worked in technology and was willing to spend the insane amount of money that innovative computer stuff cost in the late 1980s/early 1990s, lots of technology was there.
But you were talking about scanners, for example. The hand scanner, as far as I can tell, only existed because flatbed scanners were insanely expensive.
I was trying to google the price of scanners and figured Apple's OneScanner would be easier to google. Can't find the pricing for the early models. Found a NYT article that talks about US$599 for a colour model in 1996.
By the late late 1990s, you could get a flatbed scanner for like $80.
This stuff was just... not approchable in the late 1980s/early 1990s.
Now, here is what is interesting. $599 today is US$1200 adjusted for inflation in 2024.
For $1200USD, you can go down to the same Apple and buy an iPhone 16 Pro Max today. For the price of a flatbed scanner in 1996, you get:
- a portable computer with 6 cores going up to 4GHz, 8GB of RAM running a *NIX derivative OS.
I don't know how to get data that attempts to compare performance to 1996' flagships, but you're looking at big systems. Maybe not supercomputer big...
- 256 gigs of storage.
- multi-hundred-megabit/sec wireless networking. (How much did 100 megabit/sec FDDI or maybe early 802.3u Fast Ethernet cost in 1996? And I don't know what the options for faster than that might have been?)
- wireless Internet connectivity that's above OC3 speeds, maybe even OC12+ speeds. How much did an OC3 Internet circuit cost in 1996? All of Canada probably connected to the Internet on the equivalent of an OC3 or two in 1996...
- a cellular phone
- a digital camera that will take dramatically better pictures than any digital camera (or probably analog camera) in 1996
- a digital camera that can take photos of documents that will be better quality than the scans from that flatbed scanner
- a music player that can potentially access infinite quantities of music
- a portable gaming console
- a colour screen with more pixels than the highest-end CRTs of 1996
Really, for the price of a flatbed scanner in 1996, you can now get computing power and connectivity that would have required a NASA or Bell Labs or whatnot sized budget. 8GB of RAM in 1996? That'd be hundreds of thousands of dollars at least. 256 gigs of storage? Oh look, the Jaz drive launched in 1996 - $99USD per gigabyte, so that's $25,000 for 256 gigs. And that's offline removable storage - if you wanted to have your 256 gigs permanently accessible, I don't know how much that would cost. And you can go down to your nearest wireless carrier and buy 200GB of Internet data at OC12+ speeds for $60CAD/month... and connect to the Internet with a SIM card the size of a fingernail rather than a half a rack of equipment.
So basically, for the price of a flatbed scanner, 28 years later, you now get a whole number of home devices (music player, gaming console, cellular phone, camera, etc) and the computing power of a half-million-dollar+ facility and more connectivity than a giant organization... in your pocket. And you can run it on battery for half a day and charge it with a 20W USB charger.
And when I say half a million dollars, I might be two orders of magnitude too low. Some person in Reddit three months ago claimed that a modern iPhone has twice the computing power of a $55 million USD supercomputer from 1997. I have no idea what they base that on... (and I'm not going to spend another 20 minutes trying to find supercomputer to iPhone benchmark data that I couldn't find so far.)
That's the power of Moore's law. And economies of scale. And that's what makes that technology available to the ordinary grandmother...
Um, okay. Yes, my father was in IT, actually. He wasn't rich, though.
He rather was "too poor for bad tools", so to say.
That's why he had a Sharp MZ series computer running CP/M and an IBM PC and not, say, a C64.
He required the computers as tools, for programming and communication and so on.
Also, he had to sell them once in a while when business wasn't going well. 🙁
And in my case, I've used my humble 286 for learning, for discovering the world.
The shareware CDs I bought with my pocket money were a substitute to surfing the world wide web at the time, a substitute for playing outside with other kids/teens of the day.
You have to know, back then the kids in my neighborhood liked to play soccer or in the mud. sigh.
They weren't the intellectual, thoughtful or sensitive kind of kids who built crystal radios, had a chemical construction kit or who lovingly cared about their pets or something.
Nope. They were the wild ones. Running, beating, screaming.
Worshipping the local soccer club and wearing soccer fan shirts, impersonating their soccer idol on the medow (playfield) not far away.
They were the embarassment for any boy with a sense for wonder of nature or culture.
There also were unfriendly neighbors around (plus a few older, lovely ones).
So my dad worried a lot about me and wanted me not to wander around all day.
That must have been the main motivationen why I had various toys, such as both a NES and a SNES (and a Gameboy).
The NES was a second-hand model, though. We got it used.
At the beginning, I had just one game. SMB1. I got more in the following years.
The SNES was an exception, though, it was new. Got it for birthday or christmas, I think.
The reason I got it was the bundled Super Gameboy, mainly, so I could play the existing games on a monitor. An old, beige Commodore 1702 from the early 1980s.
I suppose my father was annoyed by the high battery consumption of the Gameboy, so he got me this kit when he saw it.
But back to the PC.. The CD-ROM and soundcard were a multimedia kit, the 4MB of RAM a necessity to run Windows 3.1 and applications without virtual memory.
The handy scanner and the HP LaserJet were used for school works, too.
Sure, it seems like hot-rod, but the PC was an elderly lady, really.
It was made in 1988, before re-union, had an on-board VGA with 256KB of basic video RAM and a bus mouse interface.
It wasn't capable of running DOS4GW extender games or simulating EMS.
Chipset must have been an early HT12, I assume.
But it was capable of handling the common media formats, dialing into proprietary online services or BBS/Mailbox systems.
Was a fun time. There was a mailbox list on the last pages in "BTX Magazin".
That being said, I always had to be careful when using the telephone.
My father was afraid of high phone bills, so I kept my online voyages rather short.
When I had to do research for school projects, writing essays and so on, I've had to visit an internet café.
It was better that way, probably, anyway.
The cyber café/internet café had fast internet connection and surfing the internet on a 386DX-40 wasn't exactly a pleasure to begin with.
And on my own 286-12, I couldn't go into the internet, at all.
The farest I could reach was the proprietary part of each provider.
The CompuServe forums (GO something, via WinCIM) or T-Online's BTX service (CEPT pages, KIT pages).
The web browsers for Windows 3.1 were all 32-Bit applications, unfortunately.
Anyway, I'm grateful I had been there. Even though I sometimes regret on missing out a lot, still.
(Reminds me of that saying that it's better to experience something and see it go away, rather than never having experienced it to begin with.)
Looking back, I sometimes think I should have encouraged my father to go online more often. If I only was more energic here, sigh.
Maybe then he'd met friends or similar-minded folks online, maybe and hadn't felt so alone at the time.
But there was this fear about loosing money all time - or about loss in general, which held us back so often.
Worrying about money and avoid taking risks was what did cost us the most precious, happiness and lifetime here on earth.
Errius wrote on 2024-12-06, 07:33:
BitWrangler wrote on 2024-12-04, 14:19:Early 90s, used a hypertext document for first time, thought that was "really something" then it just seemed natural on a web browser when I tried that in 93ish.
I remember magazine CDs in those days would often come with entire websites on them, so people with no internet access could browse them offline. This was my introduction to the WWW. Netscape Navigator was the main browser in those days.
Didn't Windows 3.0 have a hypertext help early on? In 1990/1991?
I remember that it was more sophisticated than the one in Windows 3.1x.
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
//My video channel//