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Fossil watches actually released a palm-based watch https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_Wrist_PDA nobody could out-nerd me with that watch that lasted only a few hours per charge.


I agree whole heartedly. My aging father went through a process of trying to call in a repair/replacement on a oven on a extended warranty, and the level of run around and hoops he had to take to get them to process and actually perform the service was incredible, things like having to pull out the oven and take a pic of the serial number and send it via email to several addresses, pictures of the receipt, contract, etc. Its a good thing he kept good records. Eventually after several weeks of back and forth and 3 failed repair attempts, they sent him a check for the full amount for replacement.


Compute! had a fork? of a magazine specifically for Commodore Computers called 'Compute! Gazette' https://archive.org/details/compute-gazette I spent many of days in my youth typing in the pages of code they included at the end of every issue.


Yeah, I get that this is a re-creation of an existing title focused on C64 (also published out of the same office as the one I worked in). What's odd to me is that there's no connection to the original magazine -- no IP rights acquired, none of the old writers or editors involved, just name-squatting on something people feel nostalgia for. But maybe it'll be great.


Oh that 'free' 3g was amazing! I was able to hobble through gmail through the browser, and even wrote a kindle-friendly Zork website so one could play text games on it allowing you to choose from a bunch of zmachine roms. Had some traction getting mentioned on a few news websites.


This reeks of attempting to close the garden further. Whatever happened to that boot/hack that gave cli to ipad that was mentioned a few years ago.


The few instances I travelled in remote areas with little to no Internet, and moreover no over the air TV reception, I always mulled how a simple 1K-2k setup with a mini PC running plex and a 10-20TB of disk space could provide an plex TV media library (movies, tv, audio) for a small neighborhood. Throw in Ubooquity for books and audiobooks, you can provide a massive library of media entertainment and education to the area. (of course, copyrights be damned) also: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDbyYGrswtg


I recall in the late 80s on vt100's accessing BITNET allowed you to 'net send'-like to other BITNET nodes around the country. I used to randomly try to contact other users at other random educational institutions after using the 'finger' equivalent to remote BITNET sites. I can only imagine how my messaging probably messed up their terminal session screens and just end-user confusion ensuing.

Another 'write' unix shenanigans was the ability to send control sequences, so one could send a 'terminal reset' sequence to any user online a terminal room using a dumb terminal (wyse, vt100 etc) and it would quickly reset the terminal and log them off. One could even send a long sequence of control strings to force a crude ascii animation, then reset terminal if you wish. (not me of course)


> to 'net send'-like to other BITNET node

The command was TELL on IBM VM operating systems, IIRC. "TELL <user> AT <node> <message>".


Lora would be an interesting text-based communication method. Although closed sourced, its dirt china cheap.


This seems like a step closer to the 'Her' movie AI entity (voiced by Scarlett Johansson) , or more closely, the scene where she converses with a Alan Watts, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Exe7yup2Yu0 where in the movie did something that this inifiniteconversation has done in terms of feeding in a deceased philosophers works and voice to create an AI representation of the person.


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