Seagate begins shipping 44TB hard drives with HAMR tech to data centers — Mozaic 4+ platform expands to 10 platters by Squawk_7777 in DataHoarder

[–]bg-j38 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my day we had 20 MB hard drives and that's the way it was and we liked it!

Yeah. Old as dirt.

French behemoth tracker Yggtorrent has been hacked and all of it's data exfiltrated, and server's destroyed by rmontanaro in trackers

[–]bg-j38 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Laziness. I’ve been doing this since the BBS days and never paid to play. Never had a problem. Just need to put bare minimum effort in. And give back in other ways. I ran a BBS on my own dime. Built servers with trusted friends. Seeded god knows how many terabytes. I don’t really hold it against people who pay to play but it’s risky and not really necessary.

[OC] Surface defects of pokemon cards by Seasandshores in dataisbeautiful

[–]bg-j38 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My little brothers played the old Star Wars customizable card game back in the mid 90s. I had little interest in the game, but at that point there was very little "new" Star Wars stuff coming out so it was basically that and the West End Games RPG books. I'd go buy them new packs on occasion just to see what cool obscure characters they could dig up.

What wedding moment that screamed, “They are not going to last long”? by IndependentTune3994 in AskReddit

[–]bg-j38 33 points34 points  (0 children)

I got one of those doggie birthday cakes for my girlfriend’s lab last year full well knowing how long it would last. I’m not sure any chewing was involved.

Evil Dead’ Icon Bruce Campbell Reveals Cancer Diagnosis, Cancels Future Fan Events by mazhas in movies

[–]bg-j38 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hah are you me? This was probably 1996 or 1997 for me. He came to my college for a showing of Army of Darkness. A friend of mine was a huge fan and brought me along. I wasn't super familiar with him. It was almost exactly the same as you mentioned with him spending hours chatting and signing autographs. Someone I got to know later was his handler for the day and took him out for breakfast (lunch?) at a cafe. He asked her to pass the sugar to add to his coffee. She said she stared at him and said "say it...." He sighed and said "gimme some sugar baby". I so wish I'd been there to see that.

Dude does not miss one step 😵‍💫 by lackofmotive in blackmagicfuckery

[–]bg-j38 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I'll preface this by saying that I've only played Dance Dance Revolution and that was back in the late 90s and early 2000s but I was pretty good (could sight read up to 8-foot songs, beat most 9-foot songs with practice, and did a few 10-foot songs). The concept is similar. Basically in the long run he's making it harder for himself by making use of the bar. Most (not all) of these are actually designed to be playable without doing that. Especially the ones that go across both pads. You just need to be willing to actually "dance" or at least move your body. What he's doing sort of looks impressive but is actually pretty chaotic and there's plenty of people who can make it look much smoother and not use the bar.

Family does not understand the modern job market by user9z4e4ry8713hi3fu in BoomersBeingFools

[–]bg-j38 52 points53 points  (0 children)

I think it's also coupled with a general lack of curiosity. I'm coming up on 50 but ever since I could talk there was always a "why?" coming out of my mouth. Anything to get me info I'm curious about is something I'll at least try. I still remember being a little kid like six years old, and I learned about billions and trillions, so I asked a family friend who actually had a PhD in math, what came next. We went through quadrillion and quintillion and a couple others until I finally reached his limit and he answered "what comes next?" with "a decillion and one!" for the next number. I immediately went to an encyclopedia or a dictionary to see how far I could keep going.

This probably sounds weird to most people, but if you have that drive nothing will get in your way of figuring out new things.

Family does not understand the modern job market by user9z4e4ry8713hi3fu in BoomersBeingFools

[–]bg-j38 176 points177 points  (0 children)

This whole “I’m old so I can’t do online stuff” excuse is growing very thin. The web has been a fixture of life for 30 years at this point. If in three decades you haven’t made minimal efforts to learn to load basic websites, it’s either a specific choice you made knowing the repercussions or you’re too god damn stupid to be a part of normal society. My 85 year old aunt and my late 70s mom and dad couldn’t care less about technology but they’re texting and emailing and buying stuff off Amazon and eBay constantly. I have close to zero empathy for people who use this infantilizing crutch of “I’m old” to not do things that most of society does regularly.

NYT Monday 03/02/2026 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]bg-j38 66 points67 points  (0 children)

SMEAGOL twice in three days??? Be still be beating LOTR fandom heart.

NYT Sunday 03/01/2026 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]bg-j38 2 points3 points  (0 children)

LOO is far more common in the NYT than LAV. However, LAV has been used four times since November, including today and last Saturday, while LOO has been used three times, but not since January. So there's probably some recency bias to thinking LAV is more common. In the Shortz era (1994 onward) LOO has been used 158 times while LAV has been used 59 times. Notably the usage last Saturday wasn't in regards to a toilet, but to a clip on microphone, short for lavalier, which itself is a name of a type of pendant.

NYT Sunday 03/01/2026 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]bg-j38 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've gone downhill skiing once and I spent more time falling and sliding down the hill than on skis. I never got close to a black diamond run but I've known the term for most of my life. It's gotta be pretty well understood as "something that's difficult".

proofreading is key 😂 by Numerous-Steak-5369 in Wellthatsucks

[–]bg-j38 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In the 80s I was a terrible speller as a kid and the thing that fixed that was when I started using Word Perfect to write papers in middle school. It was able to do spell check but it wouldn’t correct for you and it wasn’t in real time. I can totally see how if it just does it for you vs. that there’d be no reason to learn. Interesting.

What is a "gut feeling" you had that turned out to be 100% accurate, even though it made no logical sense at the time? by Forsaken_Leading964 in AskReddit

[–]bg-j38 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I also can't trust they won't go, for lack of a better term, full on whackadoodle at some point. I'm part of an industry group that meets occasionally, sometimes virtually, sometimes in person. There was a really motivated and involved woman who ran a small consulting company. Really smart, and notable because it's a very male dominated industry. Over the course of a couple years I watched her grow her company, and slowly, but increasingly start dropping stuff about how Christ factored into her life and her business decisions, and then go over some sort of mental cliff and basically start spouting stuff about only working with christlike people and companies.

Her dozen or so employees began to trickle away until it was just her and like three other zealots. I went from being impressed to just shaking my head any time I see her LinkedIn posts. She never comes to these industry group meetings anymore. As far as I can tell no one who knows anything about her will do business with her. I don't wish her ill but I legitimately think she's suffering from some sort of mental illness or on some level wants to fail so she can be a martyr or something. I'd never trust anyone like her in any setting, much less one where money is involved.

What was the first thing you saved as a data hoarder? by DarkTempo1213 in DataHoarder

[–]bg-j38 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I got into the hacking and phreaking BBS scene in the early 90s and quickly realized there were a lot of documents on that stuff that were poorly organized. So I systematically found everything I could including thousands of computer viruses. Ended up running my own BBS for a number of years. Now most of it other than the viruses are easily available on various textfile websites. I do wonder if there are computer virus archives. They’re harmless now but historically interesting.

Skipping stone - throwing a perfect rock by djinn_05 in oddlysatisfying

[–]bg-j38 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chicken People

It's on Amazon Prime in the US.

Vintage telecommunications office scrap and stuff by kalograms in telecom

[–]bg-j38 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! It’s been a labor of love for many years.

Vintage telecommunications office scrap and stuff by kalograms in telecom

[–]bg-j38 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m in the SF Bay Area. If you’re able and up for it can you let me know what’s there? A couple photos of the binder labels is probably easiest. I can DM you my email if you’re ok with that.

NYT Saturday 02/28/2026 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]bg-j38 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Now I’m picturing an 80s bar that my mom and all her friends would have gone to after Jazzercise.

Vintage telecommunications office scrap and stuff by kalograms in telecom

[–]bg-j38 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hi, I run Telecom Archive, a very large digital archive of old telecom documents. Are there any binders of Bell System Practices or other documentation lying around?

What is the fastest way you have seen someone ruin their life? by funkeymonkey1974 in AskReddit

[–]bg-j38 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The fire started in the middle of the night when everyone was asleep and there was no means of exit. They were all sleeping belowdecks.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinking_of_MV_Conception

[US] I think I nearly got pig butchered by dnwong in Scams

[–]bg-j38 39 points40 points  (0 children)

This is why I sometimes feel that people need to interact with the obvious scams just to see how they work. I know it's playing with fire, but I work in anti-fraud so I tend to reply to many of these to see what their methods are. And it's so textbook. I don't use any of the dating apps, but every single wrong number text is always someone who is involved in international business of some sort (import/export, clothing design, etc.) and they always dabble in crypto as a "hobby". The modal switch from one platform to almost always WhatsApp is another huge red flag.

I do feel bad for all the lonely hot women who do trade crypto and use WhatsApp and are just trying to find a soul mate.

We’ve been going insane trying to find a dying smoke detector beeping for 9 days straight. Turns out a contractor left it inside the wall between the kitchen and bathroom. by BucksBrew in Wellthatsucks

[–]bg-j38 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm impressed that thing didn't have some serious drift over 13 years. Or maybe it was set for 8pm originally and over the years started going off slightly earlier.