whartung wrote:
I harken it back to firing up, say, an old Sun workstation or something. In the end, you go through that work, and you get…a shell prompt. Depending on the era of the hardware, it's a SLOW shell prompt. Whee!
Yeah, that's kinda why pure nostalgia is best left in the past, where the spectacles are suitably rose-tinted.
I have an old Atari 800XL in a closet, as well as a ZX Spectrum (Z-80 CPU). I look back fondly on the 80s and the fun times I had with these little machines, but nowadays if I want to get my nostalgia on, I'll fire up an emulator. My kit is from the UK and I'm in the US, so it would be a little work to get the hardware up and running for real, but I actually have no desire to do that because, if I did, I'd have to wait for those programs to load from tape...
And wait...
And wait...
Back in the 80s, waiting for a program to load from tape (and potentially retrying on a loading error) was just what you did. Waiting five minutes or more... listening to those tones and screeches... was just normal. It wasn't slow (although "turbo loaders" were greatly appreciated), it was just how it is.
Now you load up an emulator and the software you want to run is in RAM instantly.
It's not a "pure" experience, but I'd argue it's a "better" one.
Some people still are still trying to minimize 6502 math functions, implement a better division algorithm, sort algorithm, game of life or perfect the FORTH "NEXT" word. That's all cool stuff, and a great intellectual challenge for people who are into it... but I've not come across anyone (as far as I know), who yearns for those screeching tones, long wait times and tape loading errors.
I'm sure they're out there, though...