• kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    Ive never personally used or seen a pager in person but I’ve watched enough videos on old technology to know what a pager is. Also I have fond memories watching VHS tapes, using a CRT monitor, and I personally still use DVDs on my Thinkpad T440p.

  • greedytacothief@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Born just on the cusp of Gen z, so I’m debatably a zoomer. But weren’t pagers a big thing in hospitals for a long time? I certainly saw them while watching scrubs as a kid.

  • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    Dude I was born in the early 90s and even I assumed “Pagers” was something I am not familiar with when I read the news. The name of a city? A guy? Some ethnic group? Some new military car? At some point I thought the news outlet just meant Prague (especially since I read it in German news first). I never would have guessed they literally meant pagers. Took me like 2 news report headlines and 4 mentions on lemmy to be like “oh wait what for real?!”

  • Fubber Nuckin'@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Gen z here. I was not around in the 80’s or 90’s, but everything people describe as being from the 90’s and some stuff from the 80’s was just my life in the mid 2000’s. I definitely know what pagers are. Like hell, we had a stack of floppy discs at home and my first computer had a floppy disc reader. I used to play duck hunt on my dad’s nes and super Mario Land on my own Gameboy. That stuff doesn’t just disappear at the turn of the decade.

  • Pechente@feddit.org
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    22 hours ago

    I don’t know, as a millennial I always heard people that I don’t know cassette tapes or vinyls or slide projectors when I was a kid. I was in fact familiar with all of those since this old stuff doesn’t just disappear and was still used around me in some capacity.

    • DillyDaily@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I always heard people that I don’t know cassette tapes or vinyls or slide projectors when I was a kid.

      Cassettes?

      Sorry… Cassettes!?

      There’s someone out there who is attempting to insult millennials by saying we’re too young for cassettes?

      What the heck else would we be listening to music on, Brenda? We didn’t have discmans, sure they existed but we had kid money, and it wasn’t worth it until anti-skip came along in 1997, by which point at 10-15 we already had a cassette collection… so we had walkmans!

      2 billion blank cassettes were sold in 1997, 2 billion the year before… those born in 1996 didn’t get born into a world where the 2 billion cassettes sold that year magically disappeared before the kid was old enough to form memories.

      Cassettes were the best, though CD-R changed the game for custom mix “tapes”, I never went back to actual mix tapes after we got the tech to burn cds. Mix tapes were still going around all year levels in my first year of highschool, but it was mostly mix CDs going around when I graduated, and the rich kids were already just swapping usbs. By uni, we’d send each other mediafire links to a zip file full of mp3s.

      I can still kind of imagine the sensation of sticking my pinkie finger in a cassettes to rewind when I couldn’t find a pen. Though weirdly, I can’t remember how I used to rewind VHS’s, I can’t picture that feeling. I’m guessing I probably used the rewind feature for video more often, and was find hand rewinding my music.

      I think the older generations are forgetting how the passage of time works. Also, just how many of us millennials grew up poor with Gen X hand me downs 😂

      • leds
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        10 hours ago

        Well the cool kid in class had a minidisc!

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          7 hours ago

          I had a portable laser disc player. Lots of people thought I was a pizza delivery guy just jamming out to magic pizza tunes. It had to be held level

        • DJDarren@thelemmy.club
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          8 hours ago

          I got my first MiniDisc in 99, when I was 19. It was Panasonic off eBay, and it was fucked. So I got my second MiniDisc in 99 when I was 19. THAT one was a Sony, and was rock solid.

          I wish I could have afforded one in ‘96, because then I might have got more use out of the tech before MP3 strutted up and pantsed it.

      • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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        17 hours ago

        Born in 91, I had a walkman. Got a disc man when I was like 10, but never used it because a, it skipped like a mother fucker it I was walking, and b, cassettes were so much cheaper. I used to listen to books on tape from the library while walking around my town. My mom was a badass who replaced all our batteries with rechargeables and I would even listen to them while sleeping using the walkman instead of the stereo haha

        Also, I never rewound a vhs by hand, always used the VCR or the dedicated tape rewinder shaped like a racecar haha

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      15 hours ago

      But unlike cassette tapes (that were still quite popular if you were an earlier millennial, plus Guardians of the Galaxy) slide projectors that are often shown in many movies and TV shows (and again, used in school when millennials where there) and vinyl that had made a big resurgence and is still sold today; pagers were pretty much extinct in the US by the time the first gen z kid came into existence.

      Obviously, some of them will know what they are, but I’d bet like half wouldn’t.

      • dalekcaan@lemm.ee
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        9 hours ago

        Hell, I’m a millennial and I had a professor at college maybe five years ago who used an overhead because he refused to figure out how to use PowerPoint with the computer projector.

      • j4k3@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        I see your overhead projector and raise you a zip drive and a mini disc. I blow my NES cartridge to bid adieu to you.

        • JoShmoe@ani.social
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          21 hours ago

          I bet a zip drive could blow their minds. The mini disc and nes cartridge wouldn’t even phase them. Stuff like that are too iconic.

          • Boxscape@lemmy.sdf.org
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            19 hours ago

            I bet a zip drive could blow their minds.

            Show the Blue Yeti streaming generation the old boom mics we had. The ones that looked like refueling probes.

            • dalekcaan@lemm.ee
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              9 hours ago

              It’s crazy how ubiquitous those were. Anyone with a mic for their PC had that exact mic.

            • sp3tr4l@lemmy.zip
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              10 hours ago

              Back when all that existed for online voicecomms was ventrilo, i took one of those boom mics and taped it to one of the ear muffs of an analog headset meant for cd players, as I could not actually afford a mic+headset combo.

              Worked for years rofl.

            • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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              17 hours ago

              Lol I remember my dad being so excited when he got one of these for our windows 95 PC that he had us record something for it and told us all about how advanced it was.

        • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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          18 hours ago

          I always thought zip drives were another term for flash drives because so many people just used the terms interchangably.

          • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            11 hours ago

            Reminds me of how everyone is now misusing the term “ROM” to mean “Storage” when it actually means “Read-Only Memory”. Drives me nuts every time I see it in advertising.

    • aubeynarf@lemmynsfw.com
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      18 hours ago

      vinyls

      FYI it’s called a “record”, or music could be “on vinyl”. They were never referred to as “vinyls”.

      Also VCRs were never called “VHS’s”

      • mitchty@lemmy.sdf.org
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        6 hours ago

        I’m an annoying millennial I call em acetates cause I figure what they were called in the 40s or thereabouts is good enough for me see. Now I’m off to my ether frolicking and ice cream social daddy o or watever.

      • DJDarren@thelemmy.club
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        8 hours ago

        Here in the UK they weren’t often referred to as a VCR, or even a VHS, to be honest. It was always “the video player”. Even if it was a recorder. At least that was my experience.

  • TheWeirdestCunt@lemm.ee
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    22 hours ago

    Gen Z is a lot older than you think, early gen Z were around when fax machines were still common. Gen alpha maybe though.

    • Hobbes_Dent@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Wearing one right now. It’s my cue to go drive people to the hospital.

      Also volunteer fire departments are big users.

  • Linnce@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    I doubt it, even if they’ve never seen one in real life, they talk about it a lot in all medical dramas.

  • sunbrrnslapper@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I wondered about this as a tactic. Like doesn’t a pager really limit the age group / demographic you can target?

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      13 hours ago

      Not really. They’re using them because they’re untrackable (one way pagers only receive data and never send anything). That’s quite important if your enemy has laser guided bombs and a complete lack of empathy for civilian lives.

  • phorq@lemmy.ml
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    22 hours ago

    Even as a younger millennial they were barely in my life. My mom had one when I was in elementary school for work, and other than that I just know beepers from medical shows and Dennis, the beeper king, from 30 Rock. Technology is cyclical.

    • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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      22 hours ago

      Millennials at least had media that were still active that used pagers. For example, any kid growing up with Hey Arnold (1996, the final cutoff year for a millennial roughly), you would get introduced to Big Bob’s Beepers which is literally just a store that sells pagers.

    • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.net
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      20 hours ago

      They used them at my parents’ church in the late 90’s— parents of little kids would hold one during the service in case the nursery needed them