I miss shareware floppies.

At least with NES cartridges you can purchase them at used game stores. Shareware floppies, in contrast, are nowhere to be found—unless you scour eBay. And even then, good luck!

Shareware was an incredible experience. During a time when cartridges were expensive and most people could only afford one or two, people were giving you games—and you could legally play them!

All right, so let me be clear. It’s not shareware software that I miss. Yes, anyone can download shareware right now and run it.

What I miss is the physical experience of shareware. If you’re unfamiliar with it, picture this.

A friend of yours talks to you at recess. He tells you that he just played the best game ever – so good, he must give you a copy. He passes you that small 3.5” floppy with a handwritten word on the label. He gives you a nod, tells you that you must try it.

You go home, turn on your PC, put the floppy into the drive – and for the first time ever, you encounter Doom. You’re completely, utterly blown away.

So what do you do? You make your own shareware floppy copy, pass it off to another friend, who’s about to discover Doom for the first time.

Now that was the physical experience of shareware.

@robertnorlyn @atomicpoet
Yeah, erm, no.
Please rethink your choice of hashtags.

Edit - Clarification:
Imagine someone looking for helpful MeToo related resources & click on a hashtag. Instead of helpful links, they get a feed clogged up with misappropriated uses like this.

Not only is your use unhelpful, it actively interferes with access to help.

Please delete this hashtag.

Edit 2: Wish you only axed hashtag vs whole post, cos now this one is orphaned. :(
.

@GertyBz @robertnorlyn I'm sorry, when were you appointed the official Mastodon scold? Why don't you mind your business instead?