gerry wrote on 2025-11-28, 10:01:i can sympathise. i think its more common as you get older - both oneself and the world didnt turn out the way we expected (whe […]
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lti wrote on 2025-11-28, 05:11:
completely disillusioned with the modern world
i can sympathise. i think its more common as you get older - both oneself and the world didnt turn out the way we expected (whether we expected things in detail or in vague feelings) and there is less room for optimism when aging, at least the kind of youthful optimism.
On the particular thing of having to make some setting change in some device and run through yet another "settings->credentials->something->more credentials->more settings" loop just to get one simple thing done, i have tried thinking about that.
I was more tolerant of it when younger, i think maybe we "use up" our patience for it. when i encounter it now its not that I'm 'confused' or unable but i just find it all so tiresome and irritating, i's like i think "i've done this 20 times already, i've done it enough, no more!"
i think for the same reasons i have lost interesting in "setting up" windows or linux or android or a tv or anything beyond the bare minimum. in my experience all that setting up doesn't pay back, defaults are ok and bar a couple of security or privacy things its just not worth it. yet i see enthusiasts spending serious time on the exact UI, fonts, hotkeys, UI behaviours and so on
Microsoft and Google default settings don't work for me, and when I change them, they revert back to defaults. In Microsoft's case, default programs revert to the default at the time of installation instead of the newest bundled program. For example, the default video player in an older Windows 10 installation would randomly revert to Movies and TV instead of the new media player meant to replace it, and the default email client would change to Mail after it was deprecated and replaced with Outlook with ads disguised as unread emails in you inbox.
There's more than that, and I don't know if it's that loss of optimism or patience or just me being permanently pissed off since I was in high school. This is just what I feel like posting on this forum. At least Thanksgiving went well.
My parents are still on 8GB of RAM, and that isn't enough. Unfortunately, everyone here knows about what happened to RAM prices, and I don't expect prices to drop significantly after demand drops. Prices might drop by 5%, and the tech press will portray it as prices dropping to what they were in September. Am I too cynical?
I need to replace the switch on my ceiling fan after only three years.
Most of the Internet is AI slop and sponsored shill "reviews" (even from old review/testing outlets like Consumer Reports, and their whole website is paywalled), and no matter how obvious it is, people act like it's real.
Every website and piece of software has a special option to stop selling your personal data. That includes software running on some expensive products like cars (not that I would buy a new car anyway with touchscreen controls and wet belts). No matter how much money you spend or how much profit the manufacturer is making, you're still the product anyway.