Dollar Tree being only a single dollar on everything.

I didn’t know Dollar Tree existed further back in the years like the 80s. But, I didn’t discover the store until like late 2000s. That store was a godsend for my then mostly broke ass. Sure the quality of products could’ve been better and the food selection could’ve been better, but they were there for me and others who’re strapped on budgets.

And it was a good 16 years while that lasted. It is a little annoying at times to shop there and know it is no different than Dollar General and Family Dollar. But it could’ve been worse.

  • CentipedeFarrier@piefed.social
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    The early mass-adopted Internet, where every company aimed at kids had a website with free games, where everyone who wanted to share about themselves or their interests did so in their own little corner so you could rabbit-hole your way through the link trees, most stuff was non-monetized or had easy-to-block ads, and no tracking of your behavior was really happening.

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      People who weren’t online at the time can’t possibly imagine how truly awesome the Internet used to be.

      I miss separate websites.

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          Yea. These people always fantasize about personal websites. There are still a lot of those outside of the mainstream websites.

          I would rather a guess that it’s way more than the early days of the internet, but it seems like the most amount of effort these people can put is to whine about the good ol’ days.

          Reminds me of MAGA folks.

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          You used to visit websites. News aggregators weren’t a thing so you’d visit the different sites focusing on different things. Search engines actually worked so you’d constantly be stumbling upon passion projects by highly knowledgeable people. You’d also find geocities sites teaching you how to go Super Saiyan, it was the wild West.

          Instead of reddit and Lemmy, there were hundreds of niche forums. Maybe this is just me but human connection was a LOT easier. The internet was mostly populated by tech-savvy people who were excited to be online

          Memes as we know them weren’t really a thing. They existed but you’d reply with them when they were relevant. People didn’t really “post” memes and no one was making the mass-market garbage that fills the Internet today.

          I could go on a tirade on the last one because I truly believe memes were a significant factor in the downfall of internet culture

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      Every Cartoon Network show having it’s own free games on their website was peak computer room time for me in elementary school. Fun fact: If any of you remember the Amanda Show from the early 2000s, their website AmandaPlease.com was up til 2017. It was a true nostalgia moment to remember to look at once in a blue moon as a chuckle to old website styles.

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      All this stuff is still around, you just ignore it in favour of things like lemmy which are better at stimulating dopamine production.

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        All this stuff is still around

        This may be true, but,

        you just ignore it

        is an unfair claim. It used to be easier to find unmonetized small sites and blogs. I know some still exist, but I can’t help but wonder how many more are buried out in the web, unable to be accessed by newcomers because those who run search engines have different interests than their users.

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      Yeah, once Netflix and other streaming companies discovered exclusive content it all went to shit.

      The entire point was to have content distribution separate from production, and available in one place.

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        Streaming was supposed to ‘replace’ cable television, because people were fed up of forced commercials, unavailable content and restrictions on cable television.

        Well, streaming got maybe some of that corrected. However, it has turned itself into a hydra where the content is here, there and over there with price tags on every service. Ads are now forced onto us but we now have “control” over them, I guess (if you don’t ad-block).

        So it’s like cable television all over again.

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          The whole streaming thing is capitalism in a nutshell.

          1. It forces innovation that creates awesome thing

          2. It’s never happy with the amount of money it makes, so it keeps pushing harder and harder until the awesome thing turns into shit, and on its way of turning into shit it pulls up the ladder behind it so new competitors have a harder time competing.

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          9 days ago

          It’s definitely been warped and beaten, but I at least appreciate that it’s a far more open system than cable, and thus there are ways to escape the worst of it for those who try. I let my Netflix sub expire, and instead have turned to library apps and PBS - there’s still far more content than I’d ever finish.

          • No idea if they still have them, I don’t live in NYC anymore. NYC, even Brooklyn is expensive as hell, rent was going up. My parents barely managed to borrow money from close friends + some savings to be able to afford a house in Philly, where I’m now. The last time I’ve been to the library was… idk 4-6 years ago… I literally only go to libraries to use their computer or like I wanna skip school and chill a bit there so I don’t get home too early.

            When I was younger, I remember borrowing comics and stuff… I never actually wanted to read “books”.

            I was facing a lot of issues…

            On one hand, I barely know enough Chinese to read a Chinese book (except like a childrens book, which is just cringe for me, yes I know very hypocritical since I was a kid myself)

            On the other hand, my English wasn’t remotely good enough to read an English book.

            So like comics were the only thing I could read.

            As for the DVDs, I didn’t pick them, my parents did. And it was interesting enough for me, so I just watched it anyways since there wasn’t much to do. Early days I wasn’t allowed much computer time / internet time, when I did have more access, I wasn’t knowledged enough to find free stuff to watch. So its just TV shows in Mandarin from those DVDs. It probably helped with expanding my Mandarin skills for a bit longer, because like it soon atrophys when you don’t use it. I haven’t really spoken Mandarin for like… 15 years. Except rare circumstances when there was a Mandarin-speaking classmate. I kinda remember the pronunciations, but I’m gonna have to think in Cantonese, then convert it to Mandarin… so there’s a bit of a lag, sort of.

      • BanaramaClamcrotch@lemmy.zip
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        9 days ago

        I used to live off the video game equivalent of the video disk delivery service…. I forgot what it was called, but that was the shit where basically you could “rent” a game but keep the game as long as you wanted unless you cancelled your membership. That was the shit.

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        9 days ago

        That and Mafia Wars or something like that. Never got into them myself but I had a shitload of notifications and requests from people

        Also Facebook having pokes

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        10 days ago

        the liberal international order

        🤷

        There’s always bad shit happening somewhere. I specified this timeframe as it signified an end to the looming threat of nuclear annihilation and before the start of the “war on terror” which signified a start of a ramping up of civil rights abuses in the west.

        My view is biased towards the west, but everyone has their own frame of reference. I am entitled to my frame of reference, as are you, and you are free to post your own timeframe you believe is “good while it lasted”.

        • higgsboson@piefed.social
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          I was agreeing with you… but okay. The time period you specified is dominated by the largely uncontested ascendancy of the liberal international order, aka the West.

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            10 days ago

            Idfk man, you’re saying it in a context that invokes the same mood as “liberals bad, Russia utopia”

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              Oh fuck all the way off.

              People mean the liberal international order (of western democracies) when they refer to “the West.” It is a shorthand. If the phrase can’t even come up without your toxicity, I’ll just block you and remove the source of the annoyance.

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          an end to the looming threat of nuclear annihilation and before the start of the “war on terror”

          There’s an underappreciated film that came out during this period called Canadian Bacon, one of John Candy’s last films. Basically the president of the United States is trying to improve his approval rating as the military industrial complex is imploding and sending the nation into a recession, so he drums up a cold war with Canada instead. Its honestly a brilliant time capsule of geopolitical sentiments at the time, as well as funny as hell

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        2000 United States presidential election in Florida

        After an intense recount process and the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Bush v. Gore, Bush won Florida’s electoral votes by a margin of only 537 votes out of almost six million cast (0.009%) and, as a result, became the president-elect.

        I lived through this, and to this day when people say that voting doesn’t matter, it makes my hair stand on end.

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          7 days ago

          Whatever channel I was watching election night called for Gore, and it was late. I went immediately to sleep after. Woke up the next day and it was mayhem. The split in timelines happened while I was sleeping and I would have chosen the other one, even not knowing all I do now.

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            Its me, I am them. I was praising that period. Lots of iraquis die constantly outside of the timeframe I chose and bad stuff happens all the time. Doesn’t change the key factors of being after the threat of global nuclear destruction and before the stamping down of human rights in the west

            • 0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Motherfucker, the black people were segregated until the 70s and early 80s. Get that propaganda “stamping down of human rights in the west” bullshit outta here.

              Grab a book and see how the west has been at the forefront of “stamping down of human rights” throughout most of recent history.

              • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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                9 days ago

                Ok. Black people were also slaves earlier than that. Also, the dragnet surveillance, and all the other human rights abuses created as part of the war on terror affects black people and racial minorities.

          • MotoAsh@piefed.social
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            So you don’t want to engage with a literal what-about-ism?! Pff what has the internet come to, when dishonest arguments get shot down…

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              This word you are using, it doesn’t mean what you think it means. It’s not whataboutism to say “no you are wrong, that period you say was great, really wasn’t, here’s one example”.

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    Blockbuster and similar video rental stores. Shit was magical before streaming or even getting movies in the mail.

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      Yeah, every Friday, we’d go to Blockbusters and peruse the aisles until we found a video. It was a nice tradition.

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      It WAS magical compared to bring forced to watch/play all the stuff that was otherwise available to you, but your definitely spring some rose colored glasses here.

      Yes, I also have great memories of walking the shelves searching for the Nintendo game we’d play this weekend while my parents picked out a movie or two, but I think you’ve forgotten the feeling of seeing that the one you REALLY wanted was out of stock, or rushing to head out the door in order to avoid a late fee, or forgetting about last week’s late fee and having to pay twice as much to rent this weeks entertainment.

      It was an experience that no longer exists, but it was objectively inferior to what we have available now.

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        Inferior in convenience, superior in experience. (unless you’re a forgetful slob, but like… don’t be one?)

        • Tujio@lemmy.world
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          Blockbuster generates 20% of its revenue through late fees. My lifestyle does make a difference! By strategically failing I am proactively participating in a concerted effort to expand this nation’s GDP.

          This is my contract with America!

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          It is arguably preying on this trait that made the pricing possibleAsode from that, you can’t honestly suggest to that just ‘not being that way’ is a valid option. Sure that can work to a small degree for specific individuals, but ‘just don’t be the way you are’ to solve some specific challenge, likely at the detriment to many other traits you may not want to break, is thoughtless and ignorant advice.

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      Hey you can recreate the experience by simply going to your local library, except most libraries have eliminated late fees and there’s of course no checkout fees either

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      🤣 What?? Blockbuster was shit, renting was shit. From unavailability, to fees, to rewinding, the whole industry deserved to die.

      I can’t believe people remember that shit fondly…

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        I knew a family growing up who’d check out movies from the library instead of Blockbuster usually, and as DVDs became more relevant they kept going for VHS tapes because they were less likely to be scratched to unreadability. I can’t remember how much my family went for VHS tapes vs DVDs but it may have been purely based on availability. I do however remember my dad had a strong preference for widescreen despite our setup letterboxing widescreen films (like most home theaters of the day) and quite a few times being sent back to swap the full screen release I grabbed for the wide screen one

        For any young’uns reading, in the early 2000s with broadcasters shifting from transmitting a 4:3 image to a 16:9 image, home media soon followed but since many people didn’t yet have hardware supporting widescreen, fullscreen releases typically had the edges chopped off to fit in a 4:3 aspect ratio while widescreen saw less cropping compared to the version seen in theatres, but then for older home theatre hardware that only knows 4:3 video formats it would have black bars on the top and bottom whereas fullscreen would of course fill a 4:3 screen

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    Pokémon Go. Those first few weeks and months were nothing like anyone could have imagined from a mobile game. People were outside and enjoying a game with other people. I remember seeing videos of people all running because a rare Pokemon had spawned somewhere and everyone was helping each other to get to it.

    The game itself was a simple affair anyone and everyone could play with no paywalls or subscriptions. Now it’s just paywalled events, Pokemon locked behind those events and it’s just a slog to play now.

    I’m glad I got to be a part of those early days.

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      Reminds me of geochaching. I don’t think the website charged, a GPS wasn’t already in everyone’s hands, and the stuff we hid was good stuff.

      Now they have Premium if you want to do it, and it just isn’t the same.

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      I never played it, but it looked like a good time for people into Pokemon for sure. Unfortunately on the flip side, I know of it being a problem in some specific areas too. A friend in Seattle wasn’t getting any sleep for weeks because idiots were ruining it for everyone by running loudly at 1 to 3 am near his apartment. I hope that if any other big AR game goes live, they enforce quiet hours.

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      I remember my entire team going for a walk suddenly when someone realised there was an interesting Pokemon that had spawned nearby.

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      What killed it?

      I wasn’t super into the hype but I messed around on it and enjoyed talking to people about it

      I am guessing enshittified?

      • BowserBasher@lemmy.world
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        For me, way too much being put behind a paywall. And not just big events. I get a real world event like the Go Fests should be, I even was going to go to one but Covid stopped it. But it got to the point where it seemed every in game event started to have a paywalled part to it. They started putting Pokemon behind them too and community days started to have them too. Was just too much.

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        My personal opinion is it has only gotten better. Like there wasn’t trainer battles or anything back in the first days. I could go without the new dynamax thing they’re just put out, but you don’t have to involve yourself with it if you don’t want

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      • The Rule of Law is a myth, and as a result…
      • Human Rights is a lie, and as a result…
      • Democracy never existed.

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        Americans downvoting you because human rights to them is only what happens in America, not what America does to the world.

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          It’s either that, or I have a little buthurt fan following me around. It happens here a lot.

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      9 days ago

      Fuck yes! I miss this. And bonfires! I just miss having a reason to be outside late at night. Now it’s just…. Weird.

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    Movie theaters. Post-pandemic, tickets are more expensive, cinemas are more run-down, and movie theater etiquette has gone out the window.

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      i spent most of my teens and 20s at the movies, 5 bucks a movie was easy to justify. i went religiously every other week.

      now it’s 20+ bucks and there are always assholes kids on their phones or talking during the movie. i go maybe once a year now. i rarely have a good time. my 4K OLED tv w/ 4K is a way better picture than most every theatre. i have a better time going to the library to rent a blu ray for free than I do going to the movies.

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      I actually experience the opposite.

      Theaters have great movies, indie films, and showing old movies again. Everyone has been super respectful, and there’s been a few renovated theaters around me. And tickets (at the one I go to) i think are 8 or 10 dollars if you pay cash. The fancy theater is like 18 but I dont go there. Even the renovated original theater is only 10 dollars and has recliners!

      And I dont even live in a city. More of a town.

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        I hope the trend of showing old movies continues for a long time. It gives people the opportunity to experience what it’s like to watch good classics on a big screen.

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      10 days ago

      Sadly, true.

      I make it a point to go to matinees on a weekday because of it, though we’re lucky here in Kansas City to have a local movie theatre chain that’s really good. I just hope they last through the coming years.

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      I thought I would treat myself to an IMAX showing of Oppenheimer. Worst experience of my life. Seats were old and uncomfortable with sticky shit everywhere. The seating arrangement was shit and my view was less than desirable. Audio kicked ass, but I had to walk out. I ended up going the next day to a regular showing at a different theater with the recliners and had a much better experience.

      I haven’t been back to the theater since but I have been to several local stage theaters and have enjoyed that immensely. Otherwise, I just watch all my movies at home now

      Arrrrr

    • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      So I’ve started really enjoying theatres post-pandemic. It comes down to going to the right theatre and not going to a super packed premier night showing. I’ll usually attend a weekend matinee or a weeknight showing of something that’s about to drop from the theatre cycle when it’s not very busy and you don’t have to fight for seats. Going rate is like $18 per ticket for a nicer theatre which if you only go 2-4 times a year like I do is perfectly agreeable

      Now I could see someone who goes weekly or biweekly really not liking the theatre experience these days but that’s not me

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        I go a few times a year. If it’s not opening weekend for a blockbuster sequel (like any main Marvel), the theater is half full at best. I wouldn’t call it a “crowd” experience because you’re all just sitting in assigned seats. It makes the movie the one thing you’re experiencing, and is being shown on a large, high quality screen with a good sound system. I went for Star Wars 1-6 reruns over time because the score is over the top for them. For me, something like Dune, Ad Astra, or Mad Max is way better in a theater for environmental immersion and some excellent audio engineering.

        If you watched Interstellar on a laptop and thought it was good, then maybe theaters won’t matter to you. If you didn’t think it deserved the praise for the experience, it was the playback device.

        The internet isn’t new. We’ve had home video for a long time. Pretty sure I can still find my laser discs, which played better than my VHS tapes. If you don’t have a home theater, then the commercial theater was where you go for better immersion

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        9 days ago

        Lol I never went to a movie theater in my entire life. Am I missing out on anything?

        Honestly going to the movie theatre is an experience best had with friends/family/dates. I regularly check the schedules at a few local and not so local theatres and make plans with friends if there’s something we want to see. Usually it ends up being one of the times they replay some older films (for example many of the Studio Ghibli films get theatre time at least once a year and it’s a wonderful way to see those beautiful films) because there just aren’t many new movies I want to see coming out.

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    9 days ago

    StumbleUpon was what I personally cite as the peak of the internet.

    It was a website where you made an account and selected what categories of things you were interested in. Then click the button and it would take you to a random piece of content on the internet related to that. I remember thinking at the time it was like Pandora, but for the whole internet rather than just music. Eventually it got bought and shut down.

    Mint would be another one. A free, ad-deiven website with optional premoun features that allowed you to easily link all of your financial accounts. It would automatically categorize transactions, but you could manually change them and change the categories themselves. It worked great back in the early 2010’s. Then Intuit bought it and it slowly got shittier. They reduced the visualization options. Eventually a few years ago they shut it down to try to get people to move to a different, paid product. Personally I moved to HomeBank, an open-source self-hosted solution. But it means I need to manually import everything.

    • mech@feddit.org
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      9 days ago

      For someone with ADHD, StumbleUpon was like a button that injects dopamine into your brain.
      Really fucking addictive

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        I was so pissed off when that company bought stumbleupon and trashed it. I hunted and searched for an alternative and nothing was ever the same. It was a huge death blow to the internet I loved. 😭😭😭