Path: ...!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: candycanearter07 Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action Subject: Re: This post has nothing to do with video games Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2025 07:00:04 -0000 (UTC) Organization: the-candyden-of-code Lines: 60 Message-ID: References: <2mearjh9sag87b82ooaric74dfh0hok93q@4ax.com> Injection-Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2025 08:00:04 +0100 (CET) Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="43b3bacd73a6c992995cbb2a25a43fc7"; logging-data="2277718"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1+hJkjZ25MpfT3LxoDaOrpWwDYnVkIqyBsK7zY6dCytWw==" User-Agent: slrn/1.0.3 (Linux) Cancel-Lock: sha1:4YeuFk0D3FofANiluIr7dgwwmgw= X-Face: b{dPmN&%4|lEo,wUO\"KLEOu5N_br(N2Yuc5/qcR5i>9-!^e\.Tw9?/m0}/~:UOM:Zf]% b+ V4R8q|QiU/R8\|G\WpC`-s?=)\fbtNc&=/a3a)r7xbRI]Vl)r<%PTriJ3pGpl_/B6!8pe\btzx `~R! r3.0#lHRE+^Gro0[cjsban'vZ#j7,?I/tHk{s=TFJ:H?~=]`O*~3ZX`qik`b:.gVIc-[$t/e ZrQsWJ >|l^I_[pbsIqwoz.WGA] wrote at 02:14 this Wednesday (GMT): > > > > > // I'm going off topic here. I know, a radical departure for my > // posts, right? Still, I felt a warning was warranted. This post > // has nothing to do with video games (it does, however, fall > // within the 'comp.sys.ibm.pc' part of the newsgroup, so maybe > // that earns me some forgiveness?) > > > Today, I just received my 1TB micro-SD card in the mail. I ordered it > online and it arrived in a box. Not a big box but... well, if you've > ever seen the size of a micro-SD card, you know how ridiculous that a > box was involved at all. But that ridiculous shipping is not really > what I want to talk about. > > It's the fact that I know own a storage device capable of holding more > data than I EVER owned in the first twenty years of owning > computers... and it's smaller than my finger nail. > > I mean, holy shit. > > I literally had to pull out an old hard-drive and put the micro-SD > Card on top of it, just as a comparison. It was a compulsion I > couldn't resist. That heavy, massive 3.5" chunk of aluminium and > spinning rust, the oldest drive in my collection, held 1/50th of what > this new fleck of plastic --barely even visible against its bulk-- > could contain. In the year 2000, I could have copied the contents of > every floppy, every CD-ROM and every hard-drive I owned onto that card > and had room to spare. > > And I bought this miracle of technology not only for what was, > essentially, pocket change (okay, a little bit more than that, but > given its capacity, it's still next to nothing in cost), but on a > whim. I don't NEED a 1TB micro-SD card. I don't even really need a > 128GB micro-SD card. But I wanted one, they were available, and so... > now I own one. Because the damn things are commodity items. They're > ORDINARY. > > There's a lot of shit I hate about this timeline, but the tech... the > tech is extraordinary. Sure, it's often terrifying thinking about how > it will be used, but damn it if the capability of our science isn't > surpassing the dreams of even the most far-reaching SF author. > Sometimes, surrounded as we are by all these miracles, we forget that. > > God, I love living in the future. > > > The hardware is really impressive, yeah, but the software guys use it as an excuse to be lazy :( Like, with all the +250GB games out there, high ram usage (especially on windows), etc, it does feel outweighed sometimes. But I do agree that the stuff we've done is quite extremely cool. -- user is generated from /dev/urandom