casual design – design is casual

interactive design for web, video games, and apps.

javascript and/or css is disabled.

old digital

August 13th, 2010 by brooks

Type of thing: experience-design

Our experience and its power to move us forward, hold us back, and drive our decisions, has personally affected me in dealing with computers. I would like to share a few things that I am surprised to find in the garage, or see on my screen after all these years. I have some antique computer parts, software, and gadgets around. most everything has been replaced with its descendant, but I still use some of this stuff:

hardware
alienware black case (2000) – I’ve long since sold the original guts, and even built a new system that was supposed to be a media server, but it was too noisy. Then I ended up selling those parts, and now it’s back down to the case! trying to think what to do with it.

hp flatbed scanner (2001) – it still scans!

bins full of old parts – I have old video cards, heat sinks, old hds, cables, wires, keyboards, hubs, power supplies… mostly stuff that has failed. the video card fans have gone out. I’ve been through about five video cards and five failed harddrives. im starting to see a pattern in fans being noisy and going out… if it werent for faulty fans, I probably would have stuck with this stuff even longer.

notebook
powerbook g4 ti (bought used in 2006) – I broke one of the hinges, by opening it, and from there things went down hill. the used damaged replacement screen is miserable to look at. this once cool futuristic marvel doesnt hold a candle to the macbook pro, which will soon also become a relic.

software (pc)
windows xp – installed a few longhorn rcs, but never actually upgraded to vista – now I have win 7, but still boot into xp most of the time because I dont have everything in win 7 yet.

office xp (2002) – looking at email and spreadsheets the old school way!

winrar (2001) – I am still using the free version.

veritime pro – a time tracking software that I have liked, made by one guy, and it’s not very user friendly, but i know it, and have not found one i like better.

ie6 – I still test certain websites in this old browser. evil.

tv
rca 27 inch (2000) – has not been used in quite some time.

consoles and handhelds
nintendo 64 – bought used at a pawn shop.
playstation – was given to me.
emulate nes, snes, gba – mostly to play classic rpgs and homebrew gba dev. I used to own a nes and snes as a kid.
two ds – to play the remakes of classic rpgs, and tetris, where I have over 10000 tetris points.

cell phone
i have a white chocolate (2007) – it is not cool. probably the first phone in the us to do photos, video, music, games, web browsing. i bought tetris and lost (a fun little game based on the tv show) for it.

digital camera
old olympus point and shoot (2002).

I think it’s great, because these things are really not even that old, and yet they feel ancient. people older than me will think, pfff, thats nothin when youve got the 8mm camera, polaroid, 8 track, and a record player.

well, lets hear it. the reason I posted this was because I feel as though these things, while old, have been able to go way beyond their lifespan. I could argue that some of this stuff, although slow, less convenient, clunky, and frustrating, is good enough, and makes new stuff seem too expensive, or too temporary.

it helps to keep things in perspective. it doesnt take much in software – a more pleasant effect here, a more tonal color scheme there – to make stuff appear new, when really they are relatively small refinements.

for the new os, content creation software, and video games, even the minimum system requirements are pushing anything before 2008 out of commission. rightly so, as you will save time, and the stress goes down as things become more user friendly, and the price to enter now is less than it was back then.

i would say it’s fun to hold off, if only because there is no reason to upgrade until it offers a genius solution to a problem, except that most things require a certain level of support until the product can reach that potential. I mean we still have not made use of what has been available since the 80s and 90s, but I figure there is now enough adoption and support, that things in the digital space will begin moving rather quickly again.

it is amazing how we could never go back, especially if we consider how many advancements have been made. im not a fan of phones and carriers, so an ipod touch with wifi and a few apps handle about everything, from facebook, twitter, locations, email, youtube, blogging, make lightning come out of my fingers. no camera though, might have to carry the olympus around, hopefully there are a few weird cylinders in that old pile that have juice left!

aaand furthermore, it’s only a matter of time before whats available to us now will feel, well, obsolete.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*