Hello again. The end of the year is near. A few more weeks and it's 2025! 🙂
This got me thinking - it's going to be 2025. We've already made it a quarter of the way through the 21st century! Yay!
And in another 25 years it'll be 2050. I wonder what the world will look like then.
Will there be flying cars or hyperloops or colonies in space? Will we get another Star Wars remaster? 😉
Or will everything basically stay the same?
The thought is strange, but still familiar. I mean, just like there have been reruns of Star Trek (TOS) for ages, there will also be reruns of DS9 or Babylon 5.
But somehow it feels strange to watch DS9 or B5 and realize that these shows are almost 60 years old.
I mean, the 90s were never "old school" or conservative like the 1960s.
They were modern, open-minded, fresh and wild. A bit like the 80s before that.
Sitting there and thinking about it in 2050 must feel strange, I imagine.
Also in terms of hobbies. Will reading comics in paper form be as old-fashioned as listening to music played by a gramophone?
Will there be kids playing with an NES (or NES Mini) on a vintage OLED TV?
And will there still be fans of DOS and Windows 98SE?
- PC/XT era DOS hardware can already be easily built from scratch.
The idea that there will be kids tinkering around with Windows 98SE VMs in 2050 feels somehow strange, but familiar at the same time.
Will they have Winamp installed and listen to historical MP3 files?
Will they play online games within the Windows 98SE VM?
- If so, what workarounds do they need to use to integrate SMB v1.0 into a SMB ~v27.0 network? 😉
I find it fascinating to dream about how it will be.
I mean, looking back, there are still fans of black and white TVs from the 50s or an Atari 2600 from the 70s.
Even young people, teenagers and children still play NES and SNES games today.
Either through emulation or by using vintage hardware or by using clone consoles (which are still in production). So it's not an old people's thing. Gamers are gamers.
Still, it will feel strange that such an old technology still works somewhere in the world.
In the early 90s, the entire microcomputer software library was 20 years old at most.
In 2050, we will be able to look back on 80 years old software.
CP/M from 1976 will be 74 years old then.
Children in 2050 must also wonder about old systems like the C64 and think it's ancient.
To them it might feel as old as the gramophone or the Titanic does to us.
Perhaps they'll try to imagine the days of their great-great-great-grandfather.
They might see a worn-out C64 behind glass in a museum, just as we might see a replica of Graham Bell's/Philipp Reis' telephone or a telegraph key.
And once a month museum staff will demonstrate the workings of one of the last original C64s.
A middle-aged man or woman wearing white gloves will run some demonstration programs on a replica of a black-and-white cathode ray screen.
In the background, projections will show late 20th-century footage of a freshly restored 1980s demo film showing teenagers and adults working on a C64.
The black-and-white screen was specially made in the museum's factory.
Because the complete lack of a screen mask made it possible to recreate a makeshift monochrome screen.
The image will be noisy and distorted, but the children will gather around it and be amazed at what their ancestors worked with.
They will also wonder what strange clothes the people in the projection wore in the late 20th century.
Little do they know that the "shirts" were wool sweaters made of real, natural wool..
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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