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One of the perks of growing up is getting a pass on lecturing the youth. Just look at the '90s kids. Every breath they take and every move they make, they'll be reminiscing about the good old days.However, it doesn't mean we have to hate on the fellas. Let's approach this as an anthropological study, why don't we? For example, if we were to fire up the Today's Kids Will Never Know tweets, we'd immediately get a whole depository of things that perfectly define those who were born in the past millenia. Like, the WordArt Gallery or some floppy disks. Don't know what I'm talking about? Continue scrolling and check it out for yourself.

#1

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

The '90s was an interesting era for music lovers. MTV helped return the hit single to prominence, however, people acquired new music mostly by buying CDs. Which usually meant paying for and getting the whole album. So if you heard a piece by an unknown band and wanted to own their songs, you were getting yourself into a bit of a gamble.
However, during the '90s, the CD reigned supreme. It became the biggest money-spinner the music industry had ever seen. “In the mid-90s, retailers and labels felt indestructible,” said Rob Campkin, who worked for HMV between 1988 and 2004. "It felt like this was going to last forever."
As the economy kept growing, annual global sales surpassed 1bn in 1992 and 2bn in 1996. The profit margins were incredible, too. The CD not only cost less to manufacture than vinyl, it was also cheaper to transport and stack in stores, while selling for up to twice as much. The prices kept growing even when the costs started shrinking. “It was simple profiteering,” said Stephen Witt, whose new book How Music Got Free chronicles the industry's vexed relationship with the MP3. “[Labels] would cut backroom deals with retailers not to let the price drop. The average price was $14 and the cost had gotten down almost to a dollar, so the rest was pure profit.”

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Iggy
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

CDs were really, really expensive in Ireland in the 90s (IR£22.99 (about €28!) was the average) so I used to try persuade myself that I would like it if I just tried really hard.

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John C
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I guess I'm a dying breed, but I still make a point of listening to the whole album when an artist piques my interest. I always try to give it at least 3 playthroughs, unless it REALLY sucks. Found so much great music that way that'll never make the airwaves/pandora/spotify playlists, and it feels so much more personal.

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Kathy Baylis
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Then having an album that’s in pristine condition except for one completely worn out track.

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Viv Hart
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

How about when you could buy the 78 rpm or the 7-single, where you had 2 recordings, both were usually hits.

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Jeff Requier
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Try being in a secluded town and ordering CDs and waiting weeks for your music to arrive. Everyone buys albums for the single, some bands have one great song and all their other music is s**t. Kids today wont know what its like to buy CDs and finding out the music on said CD isnt even the right genre of music. Someone screwed up making it and lasered country onto a metal album

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BG
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Getting caught up in the moment at a concert and buying the album of the opening band. When you get home to listen to it, it ALL sucks!

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Stanley Yayo
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We used to buy empty cassettes and give to DJs who would put in the list of songs we wrote down for them in the cassettes and pay them. It saved us buying all those expensive albums in CDs and end up hating the other songs.

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Peter Holmes-Hart
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A gamble, true. I still feel dissapointed when I like a song by a band and then experience similar when finally playing the whole album on spotify.

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Mascha Claessens
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

At my music store, you could listen to the album before buying it. Yeaahhh... Nonetheless, I bought some baaaad albums, in hindsight.

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Fleur De Lis RN
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Fast forward...I hear a song I like then listening to their other songs on iTunes. For example, the guy who did the Glade holiday commercial. Listened to his other stuff and No!

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Wasn’t Me
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had a 3 song rule.... I had to like at least 3 songs from an album before I bought it. Still kinda stick to that now

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Symtpom
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

have you ever heard a fire song on tik tok only find the full song is trash after looking it up?

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Baron Simone Von Bianco
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There was the cd single actually, back then and still today (oh yeah). Or as some artists call it "EP": a mini album with maximum four/six (already a luxury) tracks where there was the single in radio edit, the album edit or extended mix, two remixes of the said single or two completely different songs. The price was right for the content, actually. If you were allowed to buy such single or "maxi" cd, probably you would have already a good idea about the music of your favourite artist before buying blindly the whole album.

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Valerie Ward
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yeah but the 60's & early 70's albums went through the roof with excellent tracks..too bad!

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Rita Frost
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And no-one seems to have mentioned, scratching the LP as you moved the needle up and over the bad stuff, and tried to land it gently.

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Karen Klinck
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Having kittens who decided to slide down the vinyl LP. *That* got interesting...

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gene long
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Kids from 80's+ don't know anything about the past before electronics cell phones, CD's, electronic games etc. They don't know what it was like to sit down to a meal and have an actual conversation. Go anywhere without a cell phone permanently fixed to your hand., electronic games, remote controls or any thing where you can and sit and stare at a screen, oblivious to what's happening around you.

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Sam T Godfrey
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Cd's? I used to buy LP's just for the album cover art. Some of them turned out to actually sound good!

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Thomas Turnbull
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

So true this happened to me so many times. Still happens on some CD's so today's youth may find out.

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Elijah Snow
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Absolutely idiotic. The piece of musical art is the whole album, not a single or a single song. I really hate how people in the 90s used to view music, and I hate the way the new generations see it now. It's disgusting.

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shado
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

can't say I miss cassettes or CDs - though I do have an awesome library of both, still - nor a fan of streaming but an instant love for the digital world, with a music library on a USB stick ... holds 2,000+ tracks of my own choosing, slips into the dash, only needs to come out to update or add to ... no more fast-fowarding or rewinding to find that favorite song (singular) and a want to skip the rest of a 'c**p' album ... also no more packing suitcases or binders of tapes and CDs - which were far to easy to have stolen, wiping out a costly-built music collection instantly

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Mari Bryant
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Uhm...buy the single? Vinyl, cassette, cd, mp3. Buy. The. Single. Lol

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Steve Cruz
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

...or the huge surprise that an entire album is a fantastic journey, not just the one song they downloaded.

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CherylTunt
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That’s why you go to, Sam Goodys and listen to the cd first 😁

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Lou Lopez
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Adema did this to me! Now I never buy music until I've listened to it.

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Daniel Mason
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My mum used to wait until the charts was on the radio and record it with a tape cassette

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Ande Abdrop
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I bought , by accident, a 12 inch of GENESIS. It was really a 45rpm, not a 33rpm! And it contained "Spot the pigeon", where the guitar goes "DANGALANGALANGALANG" for the whole song on ONE note only. I was very disapointed. So was the guitarist, and "then there were three"... he left GENESIS!

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Baron Simone Von Bianco
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Steve Hackett left Genesis because his work was considered, apparently, rubbish by his own bandmates whom actually relegated all his latest musical input to "Spot The Pigeon". "Spot The Pigeon" anyway is actually considered a single, not an album and that's why it's a 45 RPM. The Genesis led by Phil Collins anyway released a lot of good music, very fitting in the early 80s/90s. Their psychedelic era's releases were great recordings indeed but was time to enter a new decade and the UK was knee deep inside the post punk phenomenon so the use of synths and electronica was mandatory to stay in the biz.

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Rissie
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

You do know record stores had the option of previewing the album right?

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John
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Some did, sure. But even if they did you wouldn't want to stand there awkwardly listening through the stores giant theft-proof headphones for an hour.

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I love Foxxy
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4 years ago (edited)

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Why not just buy the singles themselves. That’s all I used to do. EDIT: oops forgot that single CD’s were usually the hit songs of the artist, so forgot my original comment.

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Sivi
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Cause it was not always avaible. I have one Aqua CD that have only Barbie Girl + diffrent version of that song.

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#2

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Not only was it a good release of emotions, but there was also no Messenger. No Skype. No nothing. The other person couldn't bombard you with texts to prolong the argument. And if they tried to call you back, you could always unplug the phone!

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I love Foxxy
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

One of my friends always ended a call by saying “what sound does a truck make” then you would hear the hang up tone “beep beep beep beep” like a truck reversing.

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#3

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

In the early '90s, dial-up internet access was limited to 56 kbps modems connecting via phone lines. At this speed, a low-quality song (about 3.5MB) took around 10 minutes to download at full speed. If you think that's a lot, there were times when the speed was slower and it took somewhere around 30 minutes to a few hours. A 700mb low-quality movie took about 28 hours at full speed or 3-5 days at low speed. And since the connections weren't that stable, looking at the 'estimated time' graph of a download was like going on an emotional roller coaster ride.

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Poonam Karekar
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

i use to start the transfer in the night before going to sleep and it used to be still going on in the morning

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#4

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Even though the mobile phone was invented in the 1970s, it took a couple of decades until it became more practical and gained popularity outside the business circle. Think about it, in 2018, there are 123.7 mobile cellular subscriptions per 100 people. In 1995, this number was 12.7. The phone was a possession of the family, not a thing of the individual. So when you called a friend, a lot of the time you had to get through their parents first!

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Kaisu
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I was always nervous about calling my best friend's house because I was worried his sister might pick up and she was always really mean

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#5

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Before adopting video on demand and video streaming services such as Netflix, people got their movies from rental stores. However, these places generally had limited supplies of new releases so whenever you wanted to watch a new blockbuster, you had to beat the competition of the whole neighborhood. Which often came down to being really lucky or knowing one of the clerks or owners.

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#6

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

The cassette tape was developed by Philips in Hasselt, Belgium, and introduced in September 1963. It stored typically 30 or 45 minutes of audio per side and peaked in Western Europe and North America in the 1980s. People still used them in the early 1990s, however, it was soon overtaken by the CD.

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Toujin C'Thlu
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or the hilarity of playing the cassette tapes fast and making everyone sound like chipmunks.

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#7

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

WordArt is a Microsoft Office text-styling utility which allows users to stylize text with various "special effects" such as textures, outlines, and many other manipulations. When presenting our printed projects, me and my classmates would constantly try to impress one another by making the title as wicked as possible. We'd put shadows under the letters, bend or stretch them, that kind of thing.

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Kaisu
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This and Microsoft Paint were like my favourite things to do on a computer as a kid

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#8

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

It takes a while until you figure out how the legendary single-player puzzle video game works. The objective of the game is to clear a rectangular board containing hidden "mines" without detonating any of them, with help from clues about the number of mines in each neighboring field. Even though the game was created in the 1960s, and it is still written for many computing platforms in use today.

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#9

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Adding text messaging to mobile devices began in the 1980s, while the first SMS message was sent in 1992 over the Vodafone GSM network in the UK. The initial growth for SMS was slow. The average American user sent only 0.4 texts per month in 1995. However, as phones and networks adapted to better accommodate the service, people started using it more and more. By 2000, that average number increased to 35.
Short messages can be encoded using a few alphabets: the default GSM 7-bit alphabet, the 8-bit data alphabet, and the 16-bit UCS-2 alphabet. Depending on which alphabet the subscriber has configured in the handset, this leads to the maximum individual short message sizes of 160 7-bit characters, 140 8-bit characters, or 70 16-bit characters.
In a time where only half of adults in America were using the Internet (not to mention neither Skype nor Facebook existed), SMS was the preferred method on instant messaging, and since each and every message cost money, you had to get creative with the way you phrased your words to minimize the number of characters needed to get your thoughts across.

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Kaisu
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Also my phone could fit like fifteen texts and then it was full so I had to keep deleting texts once I had replied to them

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#10

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Portable CD players became popular in the 1990s when the anti-skip technology was introduced.
Even though Sony's first portable CD player, the Discman D-50, came out in 1984, it wasn't profitable. However, as the product gained popularity, it soon became profitable, and Sony began to create a portable CD market. The Discman range was later named CD Walkman.
Other manufacturers soon followed in Sony’s footsteps and started offering their own portable CD players, but these devices really took off in 1997 because of Electronic Skip Protection, making possible heavy usage.

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#13

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

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Molly E
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Do you even know how many people have actually put Micheal Jackson: Issued black, returned white? 😆

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#16

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

These tiny pencils (and all similar writing implements) were all the rage at one point in time. And it seemed like everybody at school had at least one. They were fun to play around with because you could take off the topmost pencil or pen and put it on the bottom, pushing the whole stack upward.
However, there was a slight hitch to the design. Losing just of the mini-pencils meant that you couldn’t write with them without pushing the pencil lead inside.

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#17

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Not every few days, but once a couple of weeks more like. Most computer mice used to have rubber balls instead of lasers to determine the position of your mouse pointer in relation to the mouse’s position on your table.
Tables get dusty. The dust gets on the ball. The dust gets inside your mouse. You have to get the dust out of the mouse. You put the dust on the table. And the entire process repeats itself until the invention of laser mice. There was always something oddly satisfying about cleaning your mouse.

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I love Foxxy
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That’s probably why our compute mice didn’t last long, they never got cleaned lol.

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#18

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Nowadays, calling someone, texting them, and using the internet is incredibly cheap. But, boy, were phone bills a lot bigger back in the day! There were loads and loads of different plans tailored to different customers. But plenty of them offered unlimited calls/texts/internet after a certain hour at night.

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I love Foxxy
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4 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Haha, I remember when my first mobile had the offer free, first 20 mins from 7pm-7am from Optus to Optus. I used to chat to a friend for 19 mins, hang up, then call back, then talk for another 19 minutes, so on and so forth.

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#19

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Most of us used to have humongous videotape libraries at home. With the advent of the DVD era, sadly, we had to let go our bulky tapes because of how space they took up. Videotapes have a certain aesthetic quality that discs can hardly beat, though.
However, did you know that the videotapes that we’re used to could have looked slightly different? In the late 1970s and 1980s, the so-called videotape format war raged between the Video Home System (VHS) and Betamax format videotapes and recorders. VHS won, but sadly, it’s now being forgotten.

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I love Foxxy
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I used to own a few hundred videos, was so pissed when VCR’s were replaced and I had to get my movies in DVD form.

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#20

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Nearly everyone knows the face of Ronald McDonald the clown. But way back in the past, he used to be just one of a huge cast of McDonald’s characters, including Grimace, the Hamburglar, Birdie the Early Bird, Mayor McCheese, and others.
For those of us born in the 90s, they were every bit as important as Ronald McDonald!

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#21

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

The internet used to be expensive and far from every vehicle had a GPS (those cost some serious mega-bucks back in the day). So if you needed directions to get to somewhere from your home, you’d look the info up online, then print the directions out.
It was a modern way of getting a physical copy of a detailed map with directions. Of course, nowadays, all we have to do is turn on a map app on our phones. Though some of us still prefer using huge maps that unfold to be larger than us.

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#22

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Personal mobile phones weren’t a thing back then (unless you were in the military or were an extremely successful businessman). So when we needed to call a friend, we’d dial their stationary phone. And who’d usually pick up the receiver than your pal’s parents?
When you’re a kid, it’s terrifying speaking to an adult because you start thinking all sorts of weird thoughts. Am I wasting their time? Am I going to get my friend into trouble for a larger telephone bill? 

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Carol Emory
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or the sheer terror of answering the phone because you had no idea who was calling.

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#23

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Here's something that might just blow your mind: Netflix used to be a DVD-by-mail company! What's more, it still is for a staggering 2.7 million US subscribers.
"The familiar red envelopes have been arriving in customers' mailboxes since 1998 and helped earn the company a healthy $212 million profit last year," writes CNN. Truly unbelievable.

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#24

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Using iPods to find specific songs was a bit of a hassle because there was no CTRL+F-style search function. Imagine what a pain in the neck it was if you had a music collection composed of thousands of songs! 
Some of us [cough, cough] still use iPods to this very day, disdain Spotify, and think that taking more than a few seconds to find the song that you want is no big deal. But that’s just an opinion.

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#25

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Floppy disks! Diskettes! Floppies! Oh boy, do we miss those! Some early computer games, demos, and shareware came on these babies and we’d go swapping them with all of our pals. We didn’t need the internet to have a truly communal experience when playing video games.
Some of us might also still have a huge number of floppy disks back at home and miss having a floppy drive installed on our PC.

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#26

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Internet piracy used to be different in the past. Some people relied on peer-to-peer file-sharing clients like LimeWire to get access to files, including songs. However, downloading songs like this took a long time and was quite a hassle.
And no mention of piracy should go without reminding you of the "Piracy, It's a Crime" ads that we still love to watch every once in a while.

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Kjorn
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

or edonkey, or morpheus, or kazzaa. for the music winmx was the best

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#27

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Nearly all video game stores had one or two consoles hooked up to TVs near the ceiling. It was a blast trying the demo games out. Especially if you didn’t have that particular console at home. After all, they were expensive as heck! As were the games themselves. And not every parent was up to buying their kids whatever awesome/violent/gory game they had their hearts set on.

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Lisa Johannesson
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Gamecube, i miss you, your perfectly measured controls, your beautiful little disks..

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#28

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Chonky game cartridges may be a thing of the past, but there are plenty of retro gamers out there who specifically collect them.
But the problem with cartridges is that dust gets inside them over time. So if your game stopped working, it was time to take it out of your console and blow all the dust out.

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Iván Galarraga
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I used to do this way back in my Atari 2600 cartridges and I can testify it really worked

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#29

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Mommyofboth
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I spent hours creating my profile and away message with song lyrics. I thought I was so deep.

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#31

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

Lots of people feel nostalgic when they think back to the times when they used their very first chat rooms. From Yahoo Messenger to Hotmail chat rooms and others, there were plenty to choose from and they offered some people their first taste of what it was like communicating with people on the internet.

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#32

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

The GameBoy Advance SP was awesome! It was like the GameBoy Color and the GameBoy Advance had a kid together and it was mega-cool. It was similar to a flip phone in the sense that you could close the screen.
But the other cool thing was that you could slightly tilt the screen back which made it easier to play when you were lying in bed. Unfortunately, what most longtime GameBoy Advance SP owners had in common was that the back of the screen would get lots and lots of scratches with use.

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Francis
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

i just found mine yesterday! i charged it and now i am playing again! Best day!

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#33

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Renee Gauthier
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm 56 & we had ankle socks. But I hated before stretchy socks, your shoes would eat the back of your socks. Had to pull them out of the back of your shoe all the time.

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#36

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Kjorn
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Scotty doesn't know that Fiona and me Do it in my van every Sunday She tells him she's in church but She doesn't go Still she's on her knees and Scotty doesn't know

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#37

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

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Kathy Baylis
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And at first even dial up was pretty fast, because there were so few people with computers in their homes.

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#41

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

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James Pointer
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4 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Context, it's a shiny Football Sticker. It was one of the school fads buying/collecting. Much like other trading card games throughout the years, which is why like most of these pictures the "today's kids" would understand because there's equivalent thing for their times. There's literally lego trading cards from Sainsbury's kids go mad over and have trading clubs for. And the obvious Pokemon, magic and yugioh cards people have been collecting this whole time but they at least have some use other than you filled your sticker book

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#42

Things-Todays-Kids-Will-Never-Know

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MacDudu
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4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I don't understand either. C**p, was I even really there?

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