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#uphillbothways — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #uphillbothways, aggregated by home.social.

  1. @ifixcoinops

    Indeed.

    Back In The Day, I used to sell and install hard drives in computers. The boss had gotten a deal on some slightly sketchy previous-generation disks - ancient Seagate (IIRC) 20MB drives (MFM interface! State of the art at the time was 60MB RLL disks, by Toshiba I think). Those felt spacious in an age of 808[68] computers.

    I didn't get my first hard disk until my second Amiga, an A3000. I paid $1,800 for a 540MB drive. In terms of minimum wage at the time, that was about ten weeks of full-time work, before deductions.

    My point? I'm with you. It boggles my mind that so many people still trust their data to "the cloud", which as you say is just "someone else's computer", even with the constant stories of accounts suddenly closed without recourse, credentials lost, cloud providers deleting files, and on and on. Storage is dirt cheap these days. At least keep a copy of everything - and I mean everything - on storage media that you own and physically possess.

    There's a saying that there are two kinds of computing people: those who have experienced a data-loss incident, and those that will experience a data-loss incident.

    #OldManYellsAtCloud #storage #disk #UphillBothWays #DataLoss #backups #local #LocalBackups

  2. @ifixcoinops

    Indeed.

    Back In The Day, I used to sell and install hard drives in computers. The boss had gotten a deal on some slightly sketchy previous-generation disks - ancient Seagate (IIRC) 20MB drives (MFM interface! State of the art at the time was 60MB RLL disks, by Toshiba I think). Those felt spacious in an age of 808[68] computers.

    I didn't get my first hard disk until my second Amiga, an A3000. I paid $1,800 for a 540MB drive. In terms of minimum wage at the time, that was about ten weeks of full-time work, before deductions.

    My point? I'm with you. It boggles my mind that so many people still trust their data to "the cloud", which as you say is just "someone else's computer", even with the constant stories of accounts suddenly closed without recourse, credentials lost, cloud providers deleting files, and on and on. Storage is dirt cheap these days. At least keep a copy of everything - and I mean everything - on storage media that you own and physically possess.

    There's a saying that there are two kinds of computing people: those who have experienced a data-loss incident, and those that will experience a data-loss incident.

    #OldManYellsAtCloud #storage #disk #UphillBothWays #DataLoss #backups #local #LocalBackups

  3. @ifixcoinops

    Indeed.

    Back In The Day, I used to sell and install hard drives in computers. The boss had gotten a deal on some slightly sketchy previous-generation disks - ancient Seagate (IIRC) 20MB drives (MFM interface! State of the art at the time was 60MB RLL disks, by Toshiba I think). Those felt spacious in an age of 808[68] computers.

    I didn't get my first hard disk until my second Amiga, an A3000. I paid $1,800 for a 540MB drive. In terms of minimum wage at the time, that was about ten weeks of full-time work, before deductions.

    My point? I'm with you. It boggles my mind that so many people still trust their data to "the cloud", which as you say is just "someone else's computer", even with the constant stories of accounts suddenly closed without recourse, credentials lost, cloud providers deleting files, and on and on. Storage is dirt cheap these days. At least keep a copy of everything - and I mean everything - on storage media that you own and physically possess.

    There's a saying that there are two kinds of computing people: those who have experienced a data-loss incident, and those that will experience a data-loss incident.

    #OldManYellsAtCloud #storage #disk #UphillBothWays #DataLoss #backups #local #LocalBackups

  4. @ifixcoinops

    Indeed.

    Back In The Day, I used to sell and install hard drives in computers. The boss had gotten a deal on some slightly sketchy previous-generation disks - ancient Seagate (IIRC) 20MB drives (MFM interface! State of the art at the time was 60MB RLL disks, by Toshiba I think). Those felt spacious in an age of 808[68] computers.

    I didn't get my first hard disk until my second Amiga, an A3000. I paid $1,800 for a 540MB drive. In terms of minimum wage at the time, that was about ten weeks of full-time work, before deductions.

    My point? I'm with you. It boggles my mind that so many people still trust their data to "the cloud", which as you say is just "someone else's computer", even with the constant stories of accounts suddenly closed without recourse, credentials lost, cloud providers deleting files, and on and on. Storage is dirt cheap these days. At least keep a copy of everything - and I mean everything - on storage media that you own and physically possess.

    There's a saying that there are two kinds of computing people: those who have experienced a data-loss incident, and those that will experience a data-loss incident.

    #OldManYellsAtCloud #storage #disk #UphillBothWays #DataLoss #backups #local #LocalBackups

  5. @ifixcoinops

    Indeed.

    Back In The Day, I used to sell and install hard drives in computers. The boss had gotten a deal on some slightly sketchy previous-generation disks - ancient Seagate (IIRC) 20MB drives (MFM interface! State of the art at the time was 60MB RLL disks, by Toshiba I think). Those felt spacious in an age of 808[68] computers.

    I didn't get my first hard disk until my second Amiga, an A3000. I paid $1,800 for a 540MB drive. In terms of minimum wage at the time, that was about ten weeks of full-time work, before deductions.

    My point? I'm with you. It boggles my mind that so many people still trust their data to "the cloud", which as you say is just "someone else's computer", even with the constant stories of accounts suddenly closed without recourse, credentials lost, cloud providers deleting files, and on and on. Storage is dirt cheap these days. At least keep a copy of everything - and I mean everything - on storage media that you own and physically possess.

    There's a saying that there are two kinds of computing people: those who have experienced a data-loss incident, and those that will experience a data-loss incident.

    #OldManYellsAtCloud #storage #disk #UphillBothWays #DataLoss #backups #local #LocalBackups

  6. Honestly, banning Cellphones in School is like banning Calculators.

    Instead of being afraid, maybe instead teach how to use it effectively. Teach good habits around it. They're going to have it with them for the rest of their lives, in all likelyhood, so making sure they can use it effectively should be a top priority.

    The justification used for Calculators was "You're not going to always have one in your pocket!"

    That ship fucking sailed didn't it? And I called that shit out in grade 2. Which was checks I think 1998/1999?

    My point is that school boards that ban phones are luddites.

    #School #Cellphones #BackInMyDay #UpHillBothWays #Calculators #WakeUpOldMan

  7. Honestly, banning Cellphones in School is like banning Calculators.

    Instead of being afraid, maybe instead teach how to use it effectively. Teach good habits around it. They're going to have it with them for the rest of their lives, in all likelyhood, so making sure they can use it effectively should be a top priority.

    The justification used for Calculators was "You're not going to always have one in your pocket!"

    That ship fucking sailed didn't it? And I called that shit out in grade 2. Which was checks I think 1998/1999?

    My point is that school boards that ban phones are luddites.

    #School #Cellphones #BackInMyDay #UpHillBothWays #Calculators #WakeUpOldMan

  8. Honestly, banning Cellphones in School is like banning Calculators.

    Instead of being afraid, maybe instead teach how to use it effectively. Teach good habits around it. They're going to have it with them for the rest of their lives, in all likelyhood, so making sure they can use it effectively should be a top priority.

    The justification used for Calculators was "You're not going to always have one in your pocket!"

    That ship fucking sailed didn't it? And I called that shit out in grade 2. Which was checks I think 1998/1999?

    My point is that school boards that ban phones are luddites.

    #School #Cellphones #BackInMyDay #UpHillBothWays #Calculators #WakeUpOldMan

  9. Honestly, banning Cellphones in School is like banning Calculators.

    Instead of being afraid, maybe instead teach how to use it effectively. Teach good habits around it. They're going to have it with them for the rest of their lives, in all likelyhood, so making sure they can use it effectively should be a top priority.

    The justification used for Calculators was "You're not going to always have one in your pocket!"

    That ship fucking sailed didn't it? And I called that shit out in grade 2. Which was checks I think 1998/1999?

    My point is that school boards that ban phones are luddites.

    #School #Cellphones #BackInMyDay #UpHillBothWays #Calculators #WakeUpOldMan

  10. Honestly, banning Cellphones in School is like banning Calculators.

    Instead of being afraid, maybe instead teach how to use it effectively. Teach good habits around it. They're going to have it with them for the rest of their lives, in all likelyhood, so making sure they can use it effectively should be a top priority.

    The justification used for Calculators was "You're not going to always have one in your pocket!"

    That ship fucking sailed didn't it? And I called that shit out in grade 2. Which was checks I think 1998/1999?

    My point is that school boards that ban phones are luddites.

    #School #Cellphones #BackInMyDay #UpHillBothWays #Calculators #WakeUpOldMan

  11. @GrantMeStrength

    Those were the days. Enter assembler from a magazine into your C64. Store it to cassette. Then when you wanted to play the game load it from cassette and wait ...

    Still, it was better then reentering the assembler code.

    #retro #uphillbothways

  12. @GrantMeStrength

    Those were the days. Enter assembler from a magazine into your C64. Store it to cassette. Then when you wanted to play the game load it from cassette and wait ...

    Still, it was better then reentering the assembler code.

    #retro #uphillbothways

  13. @GrantMeStrength

    Those were the days. Enter assembler from a magazine into your C64. Store it to cassette. Then when you wanted to play the game load it from cassette and wait ...

    Still, it was better then reentering the assembler code.

    #retro #uphillbothways

  14. @GrantMeStrength

    Those were the days. Enter assembler from a magazine into your C64. Store it to cassette. Then when you wanted to play the game load it from cassette and wait ...

    Still, it was better then reentering the assembler code.

    #retro #uphillbothways

  15. @GrantMeStrength

    Those were the days. Enter assembler from a magazine into your C64. Store it to cassette. Then when you wanted to play the game load it from cassette and wait ...

    Still, it was better then reentering the assembler code.

    #retro #uphillbothways

  16. I figured out how to press the secret combination of buttons to get into debugging mode and run the "forced defrost" cycle on the refrigerator. It seems to have solved the problem of the INSANELY LOUD FAN.

    But now I'm nostalgic for the old school fridges that you were told not to defrost with a screwdriver but you did anyway and then after you punctured a tube doing it and let out all the ozone-eating gremlins you set it out on the curb with the door removed because there was a latch that couldn't be opened from the inside and everyone knew kids would be drawn to it like moths to a flame, climb inside, somehow close the door, and suffocate. #EverythingWasBetterWhenIWasYounger
    #GetOffMyLawn
    #UphillBothWays
    #MakeRefrigeratorsGreatAgain

  17. I figured out how to press the secret combination of buttons to get into debugging mode and run the "forced defrost" cycle on the refrigerator. It seems to have solved the problem of the INSANELY LOUD FAN.

    But now I'm nostalgic for the old school fridges that you were told not to defrost with a screwdriver but you did anyway and then after you punctured a tube doing it and let out all the ozone-eating gremlins you set it out on the curb with the door removed because there was a latch that couldn't be opened from the inside and everyone knew kids would be drawn to it like moths to a flame, climb inside, somehow close the door, and suffocate. #EverythingWasBetterWhenIWasYounger
    #GetOffMyLawn
    #UphillBothWays
    #MakeRefrigeratorsGreatAgain

  18. I figured out how to press the secret combination of buttons to get into debugging mode and run the "forced defrost" cycle on the refrigerator. It seems to have solved the problem of the INSANELY LOUD FAN.

    But now I'm nostalgic for the old school fridges that you were told not to defrost with a screwdriver but you did anyway and then after you punctured a tube doing it and let out all the ozone-eating gremlins you set it out on the curb with the door removed because there was a latch that couldn't be opened from the inside and everyone knew kids would be drawn to it like moths to a flame, climb inside, somehow close the door, and suffocate. #EverythingWasBetterWhenIWasYounger
    #GetOffMyLawn
    #UphillBothWays
    #MakeRefrigeratorsGreatAgain

  19. I figured out how to press the secret combination of buttons to get into debugging mode and run the "forced defrost" cycle on the refrigerator. It seems to have solved the problem of the INSANELY LOUD FAN.

    But now I'm nostalgic for the old school fridges that you were told not to defrost with a screwdriver but you did anyway and then after you punctured a tube doing it and let out all the ozone-eating gremlins you set it out on the curb with the door removed because there was a latch that couldn't be opened from the inside and everyone knew kids would be drawn to it like moths to a flame, climb inside, somehow close the door, and suffocate. #EverythingWasBetterWhenIWasYounger
    #GetOffMyLawn
    #UphillBothWays
    #MakeRefrigeratorsGreatAgain