First post, by aries-mu
Guys, as a very early 90s computer user, and now nostalgic retrocomputing dude, I must admit something burns!
I missed LAN parties!
See, for those of you guys who are American and lived in those cities, perhaps it was common, among computer and video games enthusiasts, to meet for LAN parties at least once in a while, both in terms of population density and of standards of living.
In Italy, where I spent my childhood and adolescence, it was different. The average family was not as wealthy as the average American or UK or other similar countries family. Mine, particularly, had a very tight belt for various reasons. We had to CAREFULLY plan every expense. Even buying a NES game was a big deal... In addition to that, Southern Italy was always poorer than Central- and Northern-, and my town, being a very small city of Southern Italy, had very few people at all (and very very few computer enthusiasts). Even if I had the money to buy a nice PC and set it up with a LAN interface, I wouldn't have had any friends to bring it to (or to invite to bring theirs) and play a LAN party.
It would have been wonderful, the whole hardware setup thing... bringing your own hardware, setting everything up, connecting them together... seeing the room with several old goodies PCs...
So, I never actually lived the experience of a LAN party. I didn't even know LAN parties existed, up to until the 201xs.
But now, with my retrocomputing nostalgia kicking, when I see posts like on Instagram or such things with pictures of old days LAN parties, I can totally feel and imagine the feeling... and I must admit I 'miss' it, not missing in a way that I did that and I miss it now, but, worst, I miss never having experienced it. Indeed, it seems a pretty iconic milestone of the 90s computing and gaming.
What are your perspectives on this?
Thx.
They said therefore to him: Who are you?
Jesus said to them: The beginning, who also speak unto you
Computers should be fun inside not outside! 😉 (by Joakim)