RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (Full Version)

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TheGrayMouser -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 3:13:08 PM)

The lack of computers, TV , radios, instant gratifications of our electronics, I believe would effect us much less than we can image. Its the little things that likely we would eventually find intolerable. Wake up in the morning with death breath? No mouth wash... Hangover, migraines?, not much there ( except more alcholal). Have acid reflux?, no rolaids or antacids. A tooth goes gamey? The knowledge that all can be done is a horse leach jerking it out w a plier, no root canal or cap to replace it...
get a hernia? no quick day surgery to fix, the rest of your days hobbling around and wearing a leather jock strap... Feel horribly greesy? Not all that easy to hop in the shower. The list goes on.
I have no doudt people pre-modern era were not only tougher physically but mentally as well. Even the toughest of us would probobly seem quite effete.

On the flip side, nites out whoring appears to have been much more socially acceptable !




barkman44 -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 4:27:16 PM)

one thing about living in pre-industrial era world would be how relatively quiet it would be.
In an episode of twilight zone a scientist uses a time machine to bring someone from the old west to the present.
When he kills the scientist and reaches the streets of the city he is nearly paralyzed by the din.




Chickenboy -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 4:52:43 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

I follow the math. Don't correct me over picayune misinterpretations.

My point being: Most of the people here wouldn't have been people here in the 1500s. Whether they were infant or child mortality, most 40+ YOs currently here wouldn't have been here. Full stop. That's my point.


So the age of death is a trivial matter eh? You say you follow the math but you talk as if you did not follow it at all [;)]

People did not drop dead at 40. Full stop... And Period.

Some people just can't accept they might be wrong [8|]
warspite1

Really? No one died at 40? Wow [X(].... sorry, just being picayune [:D]



Nice one, warspite1. Clearly he doesn't know when he's wrong. [:D]




TheGrayMouser -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 5:00:32 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: barkorn45

one thing about living in pre-industrial era world would be how relatively quiet it would be.
In an episode of twilight zone a scientist uses a time machine to bring someone from the old west to the present.
When he kills the scientist and reaches the streets of the city he is nearly paralyzed by the din.

That a good point, pre gunpowder likely the loudest manmade noise people would hear would be the church bells a ringin.




Hotschi -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 5:34:50 PM)

I wouldn't want to live in any other time than nowadays, but that's got nothing to do with computers or computergames, more with standard-of-living, a relatively peaceful era, medicine standards and all that

In pre-compter days, kids went out playing football, riding bikes, do this and that. Nowadays, they hang around in their room in front of the computer, day in day out, be it rainy or bright sunshine - and become fat and lazy.

I confess I am prejudiced [:D]




aaatoysandmore -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 6:44:21 PM)

I noticed the change in children playing in the streets and schoolyards. There is no longer laughter in the air only silence. I rarely see anyone riding a bicycle anymore. But, phones in ones ear and the Mall are as common as dirt.

Food industries everywhere you look side by side "welcome to McDonalds" they say as you walk in. I worked at McDonalds as a kid and we never said that junk. In fact false courtesy really turns me off nowadays. I hate that chit. Don't be polite to me if you really don't give a dam and are just doing it for a paycheck. Back in my day (I love saying that now and hated it when I was a kid) we meant the courtesy we gave to customers. You ask some kid nowadays a question about a product and they start reading the labels or say "I dunno".

It would seem nobody takes pride in thier jobs anymore and learn the products (without reading the dam label when they are asked each time) I'm glad I'm almost done myself. I might have liked living in an earlier time, but, since the computer age people are different.

Even online I meet more jerks than I ever did in face to face life. Lot of know it alls for one thing, wow, never seen so many. I do think computers have changed the social nature of people. I mean look at us here, would you give so much information to a stranger in real life face to face? People speak so freely (as much as Matrix will allow and other sites) it's scary sometimes.





TulliusDetritus -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 9:41:17 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

I follow the math. Don't correct me over picayune misinterpretations.

My point being: Most of the people here wouldn't have been people here in the 1500s. Whether they were infant or child mortality, most 40+ YOs currently here wouldn't have been here. Full stop. That's my point.


So the age of death is a trivial matter eh? You say you follow the math but you talk as if you did not follow it at all [;)]

People did not drop dead at 40. Full stop... And Period.

Some people just can't accept they might be wrong [8|]
warspite1

Really? No one died at 40? Wow [X(].... sorry, just being picayune [:D]



Nice one, warspite1. Clearly he doesn't know when he's wrong. [:D]


I clearly know what the documented stuff says. And I clearly know you haven't read that aforementioned documented stuff [:'(] In fact I only told you half of the story. There's a Part II for our Legionaire. After 20 years of service there is the reward. A chunk of land where he will be growing onions, fruit trees and live with his family.

I guess the Roman Emperors liked to waste time, resources and efforts with cadavers [:D]

But if you write one or two more messages, yes, I will definitely not know what you are talking about, as you apparently want to cloud the discussion.

The purpose, I don't know. And in fact I don't want to know.




Titanwarrior89 -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 11:36:39 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL:

Medicine, nutrition, sanitation, education, etc., etc. have influenced our lives so much. Go back to the dark ages? No thanks! [:-]



You forgot Coffee.[:-][&o][:)]




Titanwarrior89 -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/1/2014 11:38:42 PM)

Best thing ever happened, no "Points" in cars.  They were always a problem at one point or another.[:o][;)]




Neilster -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 1:56:59 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: barkorn45

one thing about living in pre-industrial era world would be how relatively quiet it would be.
In an episode of twilight zone a scientist uses a time machine to bring someone from the old west to the present.
When he kills the scientist and reaches the streets of the city he is nearly paralyzed by the din.

I thought about that and I think cities have always had a reasonable amount of noise. That person may have freaked out in New York, 1875. Heavy industry was still located close to the workers, steam trains, hawkers, blacksmith's hammers (remember, they were once very common) and horse-shoes on cobblestones etc...

Historians consider the 1920s as when cities start to radically change and start to look more modern. Cars take over from horse transport and there are neon lights everywhere. The thing is, cars in say 1925 were really noisy. They had loud, quite large capacity engines, rudimentary mufflers and generally, noisy straight-cut gears. So I think the average noise level in cities would have increased quite a lot in the 1920s.

Cheers, Neilster




Gilmer -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 2:09:17 AM)

I think we can all pretty much agree back in the 15th or 16th century, if you got a serious sickness, you were just dead. There was no going to a specialist that could put you through radiation for cancer or any other treatment. And if you weren't of the upper class in the 15th or 16th century, you had a really tough life. A scratch/cut that got infected could very easily kill you. Dog bites could easily give you rabies. No tetanus shots, no rabies shots, no vaccines for polio, measles, smallpox, etc. All those sicknesses could pretty much kill you at any time. Flu even. I don't know if they still believe it, but I read once that they said the flu killed more soldiers in WW1 than the war actually did.

I think that is all anyone is really talking about when they're talking about life expectancy comparisons.




rhondabrwn -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 2:24:22 AM)

My mother and father had over a dozen brothers and sisters (each) but only about 4 or 5 made it past age 12. Some were still born, some died of the flu before they were 6 (or other ailments)and this tiny few made it to adulthood. You would think that the Brown and Koehler clans would be huge, but I have virtually no relatives except for distant cousins in Germany. I'm rebuilding the family tree with my two sons and daughter... and now my first two grandchildren.

And this was early 20th century with this kind of mortality.

I watched Sean Connery in "The Name of the Rose" the other night. Talk about a fascinating, but dismal view of the Dark Ages and how people lived back then. No one would want that....




Gilmer -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 2:28:30 AM)

Were you Brauns? Or is the Brown family name just a boring old English name? (grin, only kidding on the boring).

My last name is a Polish name but a very common one. But, I have relatives all over the place, too. Big extended family, in that a lot of them I don't really even know. I talked with a cousin of my father's and I didn't really know him, but we connected on a genealogy website.




rhondabrwn -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 2:46:22 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: H Gilmer

Were you Brauns? Or is the Brown family name just a boring old English name? (grin, only kidding on the boring).

My last name is a Polish name but a very common one. But, I have relatives all over the place, too. Big extended family, in that a lot of them I don't really even know. I talked with a cousin of my father's and I didn't really know him, but we connected on a genealogy website.


Brown is Welsh, I understand, German side is Koehler from the Hamburg area of Germany (and where all the tallness comes from)[:D] Never had any contact with British relatives, but our German relatives contacted us after WWII for help. Mom and Dad sent food and clothing packages for several years till they got back on their feet. Year later we started getting HUGE boxes of Christmas candies and other goodies every year in gratitude. The custom continued for over 20 years until the WWII era relatives died off. Had one visit with two cousins who came to see my dad and meet him, but we lost touch afterwards.




Chickenboy -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 3:26:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

But if you write one or two more messages, yes, I will definitely not know what you are talking about, as you apparently want to cloud the discussion.

The purpose, I don't know. And in fact I don't want to know.


Good. I'll write one or two more messages. Cloud the discussion? Not. My comments were absolutely on par with the OP's question. I'd not cloud the discussion by taking a semantic side trip into Roman cadavers. "Aforementioned documented stuff"? [:D] You make me laugh. What a comeback!

Don't want to know? I don't give a rip. Have a nice day.




Waffenamt -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 12:03:12 PM)

I didn't have my own computer (and IBM clone 8086 PC and an inherited trash 80) until my late 20s but the seed was already planted that I would make a huge career change and thrive on the IT industry, which I still do. Yes, I was also prone to pushing cardboard markers around maps and once in a while having to restart after too much alcohol etc., wimin, or misbehaving pets. I often find myself shaking my head when encountering those who have had computers around from birth, and having them around for almost every aspect of their lives. I need to interact with people and keeping fit is also very important. I should be thinking about retirement, but at his point it won't be on a voluntary basis. I'm also an avid reader, so I could probably go back to my pre-computer days - but what the hell!




Jevhaddah -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 12:39:29 PM)

The Social inequality, the church, the smells, the filth.

Bugger that [8D]

Cheers

Jev




Rising-Sun -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 1:27:33 PM)

Believe i still have 8086 cpu laying around here and remember those silly ol' 8" floppy drives? That remind me of 8-track version as well.




vonRocko -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 2:08:37 PM)

I have more creature comforts, food, better health,free time and entertainment than Kings had in older times. I wouldn't trade living now for any other time in all of history. I would,however, like to see us in another 200 years.[8D]




Capt. Harlock -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 4:55:03 PM)

A thought: if you've seen "Midnight in Paris", this question arises. However, the two "golden ages" of Paris depicted were both to be followed by world wars. And in the first, Paris was bombarded by artillery, in the second, it was occupied by the Nazis. Be careful what you wish for...




WarHunter -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/2/2014 5:59:46 PM)

Spoiler Alert! If you do not want to know anything about me. Stop reading.


Thinking about life in a different time based on my life experience makes me feel tiny and sad.

I thank my God for giving me the winning lottery ticket of life. Living today in the USA has given me access to health care unbelievable in earlier eras.

When you pee blood, your thoughts initially have nothing to do with cancerous tumors in the bladder growing in a way to block urine from the kidney and giving you back-pain. Or Heart burn that lasts for 24hrs resulting in visit to the cutting table after walking into the VA hospital. Or a spinal cord injury that takes away use of your dominate arm and forces an acceptance of life never contemplated before. 7 trips to the cutting table each an adventure.

Computers! Computers mean gaming no matter my or your physical state. Living with computers means a game of chess with anyone in the world. Without, I'd look in the public park.

But, if i really consider a time in the past. Growing up as a child. With all the chances of never seeing 25. I'd pick 1515 as the year of birth. Living in an Apache tribe.




aaatoysandmore -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/4/2014 12:42:36 AM)

OMG ask a silly question get a real life answer. The lights went off last night about 6:59 pm and I had to endure 24 hours of the 15th-20th century. Sorta. No lights, no HEAT, my gosh it was cold. I had to get in my car for heat so it wasn't exactly 15th century stuff but darn close. I couldn't cook any food. Electric stove. I couldn't see to pee, found a lantern though for that. It was the worst 24 hours of my life. lol I certainly feel sorry for youse guys in the northern stats and england right now. Hope you got generators. I started to go out and buy one myself.




E -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 5:10:34 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

Could you go back and live in the oh say 15th to 20th century?


Two deadly words... Time Paradoxes.




Greybriar -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 7:09:59 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

Could you go back and live in the oh say 15th to 20th century?....


I could but I would rather not live without electricity and running water. Washing my dirty clothes by taking them down to the creek and beating them with a rock isn't my idea of fun. Spending time in a little shack each day winter or summer, rain or shine, to get rid of bodily wastes doesn't interest me at all no matter how many books or magazines I have the time to read while "doing my duty." Cutting, splitting, hauling, and stacking firewood to heat my home and cook my food would take entirely too much of my time.

And how on earth would I play my computer games when there is no place to plug my computer in?!?!




Jevhaddah -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 1:42:42 PM)

Mind yoo, if yoo went back with a modern education and a couple of dozen how-To books and tools, yoo may survive for a year or so before being dragged off and burnt. [sm=00000622.gif]

Cheers

Jev




Orm -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 3:28:16 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Greybriar


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

Could you go back and live in the oh say 15th to 20th century?....


I could but I would rather not live without electricity and running water. Washing my dirty clothes by taking them down to the creek and beating them with a rock isn't my idea of fun. Spending time in a little shack each day winter or summer, rain or shine, to get rid of bodily wastes doesn't interest me at all no matter how many books or magazines I have the time to read while "doing my duty." Cutting, splitting, hauling, and stacking firewood to heat my home and cook my food would take entirely too much of my time.

And how on earth would I play my computer games when there is no place to plug my computer in?!?!

Hear, hear.




warspite1 -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 3:40:34 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Greybriar


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

Could you go back and live in the oh say 15th to 20th century?....


I could but I would rather not live without electricity and running water. Washing my dirty clothes by taking them down to the creek and beating them with a rock isn't my idea of fun. Spending time in a little shack each day winter or summer, rain or shine, to get rid of bodily wastes doesn't interest me at all no matter how many books or magazines I have the time to read while "doing my duty." Cutting, splitting, hauling, and stacking firewood to heat my home and cook my food would take entirely too much of my time.

And how on earth would I play my computer games when there is no place to plug my computer in?!?!
warspite1

Well that's easily resolved duh?

Just remember, as well as your computer, to pack one of these with you before you head back in time. Then just nail it to the wall of your slum, plug in, and away you go.


[image]local://upfiles/28156/4791DBEE9C734EC4BC6298C15BE5E1A0.jpg[/image]




Qwixt -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 5:52:15 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

OMG ask a silly question get a real life answer. The lights went off last night about 6:59 pm and I had to endure 24 hours of the 15th-20th century. Sorta. No lights, no HEAT, my gosh it was cold. I had to get in my car for heat so it wasn't exactly 15th century stuff but darn close. I couldn't cook any food. Electric stove. I couldn't see to pee, found a lantern though for that. It was the worst 24 hours of my life. lol I certainly feel sorry for youse guys in the northern stats and england right now. Hope you got generators. I started to go out and buy one myself.


I use to think losing electricity was bad, until a storm knocked out the water supply too. So no water to even flush the toilets, no electricity, and no hot water for bathing for days, effectively turning us into French. [:D]

I still think modern dentistry is a huge loss too.




warspite1 -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/5/2014 6:05:26 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Qwixt


quote:

ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore

OMG ask a silly question get a real life answer. The lights went off last night about 6:59 pm and I had to endure 24 hours of the 15th-20th century. Sorta. No lights, no HEAT, my gosh it was cold. I had to get in my car for heat so it wasn't exactly 15th century stuff but darn close. I couldn't cook any food. Electric stove. I couldn't see to pee, found a lantern though for that. It was the worst 24 hours of my life. lol I certainly feel sorry for youse guys in the northern stats and england right now. Hope you got generators. I started to go out and buy one myself.


I use to think losing electricity was bad, until a storm knocked out the water supply too. So no water to even flush the toilets, no electricity, and no hot water for bathing for days, effectively turning us into French. [:D]

I still think modern dentistry is a huge loss too.

warspite1

Good job we English wouldn't notice [;)]




Neilster -> RE: Now that you have lived in the computer age.... (3/6/2014 2:13:16 AM)

A fine tradition stretching back to before the First World War...

Cheers, Neilster

[image]local://upfiles/10515/EA9D4903DB2B47FC9175E373E9492353.jpg[/image]




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