Damn my launch PS3, which includes hardware to natively play PS1 and PS2 games, has a dead disc drive. :(
Everybody talks RROD for 360 but the PS3 was also horrendous. A terrible initial generation of hardware for both.
Damn my launch PS3, which includes hardware to natively play PS1 and PS2 games, has a dead disc drive. :(
Everybody talks RROD for 360 but the PS3 was also horrendous. A terrible initial generation of hardware for both.
I feel something hidden in social media clout-chasing is how long-term hobbies actually manifest. Most hobbyists do not buy everything in one shot and assemble them for a YouTube video. It is a deliberate collection towards an eventual goal lasting many years. The journey is the destination.
You do not appreciate what you have until you've taken that incremental path. I am fucking blessed and I know the difference because I've lived it.
This was my HT in 2014, after a buildout from when I got it in 2009. It's so easy to see where people are today and look at the cost and think it's impossible. That's because they assembled what they needed across many years.
Do not try to compete with a decade of investment. It's obviously stupid but never communicated.
Sorry I know this is an exhausting thread. But I've said before on Twitter and I'll repeat here: I talk about what I wish I knew when I was younger. The possibility to communicate that to anyone is of incredible value.
Unfortunately, human proclivities discard this kind of wisdom. And rightly so, it inspires constant ideological churn and attempts at new paradigms. But so much lost is not without worth.
I couldn't agree more. I am still rocking a 2011 Panny Plasma (no burn in because of rigorous family reminders), 2011 Yamaha 5.1 Receiver, and some 15 year old Bose floor speakers. All of it will only get replaced when it's run into the ground.
Me: Is this really SOS’s account.
This pic.
Me: Yup.
@SwiftOnSecurity Briefly thought that one lower-middle box was some HP Integrity rx-class Itanium server.
Then thought, nahhhhh.
Not enough cooling fans in that rack.
Then zoomed in for a better look. Nope. Not an Itanium.
@jph @attoparsec @SwiftOnSecurity I feel there is a minimum viable thing though, any cheaper and it kinda ruins the experience or ends up wasting a lot of your time.
The challenge is figuring out what is inexpensive and what is just cheap dross.
I've had the same basic hobby for 50 years, and it's taken many forks along the way. Nothing is static. I've just picked up one back up I saved from 45 years ago as it's not so fitness dependent, hoping to get good enough that when I don't do the other one I'm not struggling.
@trib that's a beautiful workshop.
On another note, I don't personally do archery but I've known the guy who came up with the 18-1 for about 30 years. Cool to see one in the wild.