Shreddoc wrote on 2022-06-04, 23:11:Your whole argument relies upon the assumption that the current situation will remain the same. That future generations of compu […]
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HanJammer wrote on 2022-06-04, 22:41:
Shreddoc wrote on 2022-06-04, 21:31:
Points acknowledged. They apply, today. However, a couple of decades time can change a lot. Every generation thinks theirs was unique in so many ways. e.g. "The gear that I used when I was a teenager is special, because da-da-da-da... however, the gear the today's teenagers use, will not be the same to them when they reach my age!".
Such "my generation is unique" sentiments rarely survive the passage of decades.
I will argue that in case of computers and this forum in particular it really comes down to the software you can run. Of course there are collectors who are will be willing to pay idiotic sums for things with not much value (only because they are too lazy to source them out of auctions and so on) but for most who are "collecting" stuff to actually use it at some point - it makes no sense playing 20 year old games on the period correct machine if it runs perfectly good on modern PC (better actually).
Your whole argument relies upon the assumption that the current situation will remain the same. That future generations of computers for 30-50 years will still hold that property true: "I can play 2000s games natively".
Again I repeat, that is highly unlikely to eventuate. We have thousands of years of recorded history to prove the concept that the only constant, is Change.
In the year 2000, it was still quite easy to play games from 1980 "natively", with a few tweaks. i.e. exactly the same way you feel now, in 2022, about year 2000 games.
Add another 20-30 years to the equation, and that is almost certainly no longer the case.
Agreed 🙂
And well said 😀
It's partially about seeing the bigger picture here.
Imo when it comes to retro gaming, the future will have a tough challenge in somehow faithfully reproducing the gaming experience for games which depend on an internet connection and a platform like Steam to download it. The platform will at some point no longer support legacy hardware and sooner or later modern hardware will no longer work with legacy OSes, so this change is a given.
I mean I remember the basically exact same arguments 15 years ago, talking with people about how they argued that 486 would never become collectible because it was just clone hardware, it was nothing special, millions were sold and there's no reason to save them before they're all recycled, yada yada and well that certainly didn't pan out the way those people expected it and I'm not surprised. It's just logical. It's really common knowledge at this point and yes even youtube knows this now.
The same thing is still happening right now except the hardware talked about has changed along with how times have changed 😋
It's really quite logical what will come to pass, whether one chooses to believe it or not is not really relevant.
So if one cares about the late hyperthreading platform and Core2, now is the time to get what you fancy 🤗 (unless you want to wait and then 20 years later find yourself in a thread (or modern equivalent) complaining about how scalpers are making the hobby too expensive or something 😜 ).
There is however the caveat that, for all we know, emulation will go down a part that none of us foresees right now. heck for all we know in 20 years time we can actually 3D print pre-Windows hardware at home easily with there being virtually no need for the originals anymore to get a proper retro experience!
In the end only time can really tell 🙂