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The world has changed a lot since then. It doesn't feel hollow to me, but it definitely feels like a time capsule, some kind of historic document. Man, there was a printout of this on my dorm wall. My hair is going gray now. So it goes.

It was such a different world back then. Linux was new, and most people I knew bought it on CD-ROMs because it took too damn long to download. But it beat paying for a copy of Windows or...well, Windows. There was open source software, but nothing on the scale like you see today. And it was hard to get information on how things worked. Today, I can download the service manual for my TV in a handy PDF. Back then, I would have had to know somebody who had a copy and was willing to photocopy it for me if I paid him a few bucks.

Billy Idol paraphrased The Cyberpunk Manifesto (http://www.sterneck.net/cyber/branwyn-cyberpunk/index.php) when he said "information is power and currency in the virtual world we inhabit". Back then, information was scarce. So was access to hardware and software. Not like today. It's probably cliche to say it, but I have a 1GHz Unix machine in my pocket. That still blows my mind.

It's much easier to learn how to program now. It's much easier to quench that thirst for knowledge. And it's much easier to own a decent computer.

I wish this link was presented with more context of what it was like being a geek in the 90s. Maybe there's a book I can write some day.



This was actually the 80s, I believe.




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