Submitted by MikeL1412 t3_z8nqjq in Showerthoughts
Comments
UlteriorCulture t1_iycecte wrote
This post seems to be for a very specific age group. I grew up with DOS and there are people on reddit who used punch-cards.
ShlomoBerlin t1_iycf3u4 wrote
Don't make me that old. Commodore Basic was the new shit. But we had a punch card system at school.
w1n5t0nM1k3y t1_iycg714 wrote
And windows 7 came out in 2009, Followed by windows 8 in 2012. so I not sure how this post makes any sense. If you were "young" in 2001, then most likely your kids wouldn't be using Windows 7.
PansexualEmoSwan t1_iycgqnp wrote
I had a long period where I was a console gamer so I didn't upgrade windows XP until I finally bought a machine with Win10.
Also, in elementary school I was the IT kid who figured out how to make the Apple II GEs work when nobody else could. I had a Com64 at home and remember when Win 3.11 was the shiny new shit.
Now I'm a truck driver. Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
bigred4715 t1_iycgv6c wrote
Now I’m feeling old I remember using DOS in school. I bet you don’t know what a ditto machine is.
TheRealOneTwo t1_iycgyhr wrote
I grew up in between punch cards and DOS with UNIX
savvaspc t1_iychqy0 wrote
Windows XP started in 2001 and the last security update was released in 2014. For Windows 7, these dates are 2009 and 2020 respectively.
XP became very popular around 2002 and was very widely used until at least 2010. Vista didn't persuade a lot of people, so around 2010 the change over to 7 started. Then 8 was a flop, so the next big movement was around 2016-17 towards Windows 10 (which was released in 2015).
To sum up, the popularity of 7 started ~8 years after XP. I learned XP when I was 11. I would have to have a kid when I was 8 if I wanted the kid to experience 7 the same way I did with XP. Even comparing XP to 10 would be a stretch.
savvaspc t1_iychrlc wrote
Windows XP started in 2001 and the last security update was released in 2014. For Windows 7, these dates are 2009 and 2020 respectively.
XP became very popular around 2002 and was very widely used until at least 2010. Vista didn't persuade a lot of people, so around 2010 the change over to 7 started. Then 8 was a flop, so the next big movement was around 2016-17 towards Windows 10 (which was released in 2015).
To sum up, the popularity of 7 started ~8 years after XP. I learned XP when I was 11. I would have to have a kid when I was 8 if I wanted the kid to experience 7 the same way I did with XP.
UlteriorCulture t1_iychsmy wrote
I only discovered UNIX (various open source BSDs at work) in my 20s (well into the Windows Era) but really do appreciate its design.
Atrium41 t1_iychvue wrote
Apple Macintosh classic 2 was my default
Shid_n_Fard t1_iyedra3 wrote
hi i’m 20 and i see it that way, i really don’t see the appeal of windows 7 maybe someone can explain?
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