Lol, I'm a privacy advocate. I've seen how many websites have my data, and played the cat and mouse game of opt out requests.
This is a dream. I would mourn my stellar credit score, degrees, and professional certs, but I would go pick up shifts as a plumber's apprentice and just go enjoy life.
Sure, I'm not saying that they're immune from nostalgia. Im not so saying that because they were to soon after Boomers, they didn't have anyone from whom to learn about making nostalgia a marketing device that consumes everyone, and didn't really have a good run at first. The mid-70s sucked for most people, and waiting in line for gasoline with your parents and the rather bizzare kids' shows of the time don't hit as a unofied cultural icon the same as the NES or the Beatles.
They don't need a 3D map, and the researchers who have rendered a 3D map need a lot of specialized software and resources.
Xfinity doesn't need that. They only need to know when people are online, what they're looking at, and who/how many people are watching TV, and if there's indication of pets in the house. That gives them an advertising gold mine of data.
I got one once from something I know for sure I didn't download. I always assumed it was a friend of mine staying with us that was torrenting "Boss's Daughter Big Booty XXX" or whatever it was, but I never really wanted to ask.
After about 6 months I stopped using Windows altogether. After about a year I just wiped the drive and went 100% Linux because Windows becomes a liability when it does BIOS updates you don't want or need to ensure that it's the only OS on the machine.
100% agree with this. The 90's were awesome for white males in North America and a few places in Europe born after 1950, and not a ton of other people. The same could be said of the 80's or the 60's up to 1973. Just because the Boomers (and then later Millennials) were great at the marketing associated with the entertainment detritus of when they had general periods of feeling awesome about life*, doesn't mean it was the peak of anything.
Case in point, TWO of the most popular TV shows in the US in the late 80's/early 90's were one about living in the 1960's (Wonder Years) and a show that included a lot of time travel to the 1960's (Quantum Leap).
To clarify this, Boomers dragged Western culture around on their emotions, so periods where a lot of them hit seminal age ranges (15-20 becoming and adult, and 30-45 when you have career and family and haven't yet hit midlife crisis point) line up generally with larger periods of nostalgia setting in and being marketable. This is then extrapolated out to Millennials, who unlike Gen X, gobbled up their Boomer training and penchant for nostalgia hard. So the 80's and 90s were sort of this perfect inflection point of career-oriented Boomers taking the lead and feeling like kinds of the world, then selling us the most brightly-colored plastic crap in the history of humanity, and then Millennials thinking that time, when they were also hitting 15-20, was the peak of human civilization. While the births per year are not quite a bell curve, there's a range of earlier people in the generation that set the tone of that generation, which people a few years younger often go a long with. So it's the first 5-10 years of a generation that are setting the trends and tones, and then another 10 years backing them up. Schools, specially high schools and colleges with 4-year cohorts, facilitate this by having the older classes informing the younger classes pre-internet. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
For the kind of people that use IG handles as a way to keep in contact, do you truly think you can say "Oh, I only have Mastadon" and even have them know what you're talking about?
Depends entirely on the audience. The problem with privacy issues is that privacy nihilism sets on quickly, and people with short attention spans and no intrinsic idea of how much they're being ripped off quickly take refuge in the comfort of a no-friction status quo.
I'm not. Mint is all I need, Mint is all I want.
These comments really make me wonder if people would just get therapy instead of installing Arch if therapy was cheaper.