7 comments

  • gensym48 minutes ago
    This is a lovely bit of writing, and really points to the value of constraints. Some of my favorite childhood memories were being at friends&#x27; houses, huddled over the computer, playing Space Quest or Zork. At one of my friends&#x27; houses, we were aware that Leisure Suit Larry was installed, and curious, but never played it because of the central location of the machine.<p>I think the shift we&#x27;ve seen TV is something similar. When I was a kid, TV was viewed as an antisocial medium (&quot;the boob tube&quot;), but I have really fond memories of sitting with my family watching Quantum Leap or Growing Pains. Now that everyone has their own screen to watch TV, it seems the studios don&#x27;t even bother trying to make shows that appeal to an entire family.<p>We focus so much on the media (tv&#x2F;internet&#x2F;video games&#x2F;books) when ascribing value, but, as this article indicates, the physical nature of the delivery (shared living room appliance vs portable individual screen) makes a huge difference.
    • piker2 minutes ago
      Yes! And music! What a social thing listening to a CD or watching MTV in someone&#x27;s room used to be. Now it&#x27;s just isolating.
  • Lalabadie1 hour ago
    The fixed computer is also a <i>huge</i> factor to facilitate supervised computer use (and make it a shared experience!) with kids at home.<p>As much as I agree with the point of the article, I keep getting tripped up that every second sentence is &quot;It didn&#x27;t X, it Y&#x27;ed&quot;.<p>I <i>think</i> it&#x27;s repeated to form a stylistic device in the second paragraph, but then the shape is interspersed so much in the rest of the text that it reads like a clumsy first write.
    • NewsaHackO1 hour ago
      Yes, this is definitely AI-generated. It&#x27;s always weird that people don&#x27;t even attempt to sanitize the output to look a little more human. The last pic was very nostalgic, however. It&#x27;s like we have shared experiences very similar to the corner computer in the living room, complete with the stack of CDs (which will never get completely used).
  • bwestergard48 minutes ago
    Poignantly in this instance, Utopia is from &quot;ou-topos&quot; (coined by Sir Thomas More in the early modern period). It literally means &quot;no place&quot;.
  • eigencoder1 hour ago
    Call me old-fashioned, but I have a family computer. I got rid of my laptop, and got a desktop instead. It stays in the living room, in a desk drawer. The monitor is a portable monitor, and it gets put away when the computer is not in use. My kids aren&#x27;t old enough to use it yet, but it will be the family computer eventually.
    • stephbook21 minutes ago
      I&#x27;ve never bought a laptop or tablet for this very reason. No big phone (iPhone 13).<p>I&#x27;m still writting this now, from the couch. I fear how much screen time others waste.
    • bombcar27 minutes ago
      We used to hide TVs when not in use, also - now we have TVs designed to be &quot;always on&quot; and show artwork instead.<p>Out of sight, out of mine - I think it&#x27;s generally a good idea.
  • dupdup1 hour ago
    Turkish word for computer is &quot;bilgi-sayar&quot;(info-counter) mag on the image.
  • junon23 minutes ago
    Sorry but is this just completely AI generated? Or does the author really love &quot;not X but Y&quot; devices?
  • MORPHOICES1 hour ago
    [dead]