Is the magic really gone?


Recommended Posts

But, but the poRn is better than evar .... :p

awww dontcha miss the 8-bit pixelated strip poker images :p

I'm an optimist.

I'm sure some new gadgets that will be released in the next 10 years will blow everyone's minds off.

The sound and video quality are destined to become better too.

As for the computers, the power will keep on increasing, while the size of the chips will continue to shrink - that, coupled with new materials being invented, will open new possibilities: wearable computers, augmented reality, etc.

agree to a point but the higher the resolution and display quality doesn't make up for the dearth that is content, film studios are stuck in a cash cow loop. a turds a turd in HD/SuperHD or in 3D :)

Remember typing assembler code from PC Magazine into Debug.com?

Double checking painstakingly before hitting CTRL-Z.

Setting DIP switches on your expansion card, then booting and praying there wouldn't be an IRQ conflict?

The sense of reward and gratitude you felt after succeeding?

I never considered computers "magical"!? I was programming simple BASIC logic puzzles when I was 7 and always saw them as a tool. The cyberpunk nonsense you remember was absolute guff that Holywood pushed.

Ah the good old days, for me it was rewriting PCjr Games for a PC AT clone we had, back in the days when computer mags had programs you could type in in the middle, and wondering why there had to be different syntax's in BASIC for the PC AT and PCjr.

That's a very ignorant thing to say. That wouldn't change anything nor bring back that spark we use to feel.

Not really ignorant at all. Generally when people aren't "feeling" something anymore, they no longer do it. It's a perfectly reasonable suggestion.

I've lost some of the magic feeling, I think Win 7 was the last OS I actually got even slightly excited about when builds leaked, Vista I was jumping up and down each new leak, I didn't really have much interest in 8 even though my younger self would have not been able to sleep with such a radical change as the new UI

I used to get excited during Vista leaks even if the only change was a new sound or icon :laugh:

I think it is age, I feel like I am fighting a losing battle against boringness, I get the odd moment here and there where I`ll head over to BA and grab an old Beta of some OS and play with it in VMWare but it lasts only up until the first crash or error and I return to just wanting a working machine again

I think the magic is still there, but convenience and complacency has made a lot of people less likely to discover new things or build something.

I mean I've recently bought a Raspberry Pi, and I've already created a few interesting web-based applications for it, the whole thing is really interesting to me. There's also Arduinos and other IC's that you can mess about with. These types of things are far more accessible than they used to be.

I've really been enjoying getting back to the bare command line on an OS, you do feel like you're more in control.

The magic started dying when they started dumbing everything so that grandma could use it.

Install LFS (Linux From Scratch) or at least Arch Linux - preferably without a GUI ;) - fire up Perl, Emacs and maybe a litte GCC (or LLVM/Clang if you really want to feel the magic) and trust me, the magic will be there and your grandma wouldn't be able to watch while you use it let alone to use it herself :)

Install LFS (Linux From Scratch) or at least Arch Linux - preferably without a GUI ;) - fire up Perl, Emacs and maybe a litte GCC (or LLVM/Clang if you really want to feel the magic) and trust me, the magic will be there and your grandma wouldn't be able to watch while you use it let alone to use it herself :)

And your point is? Without GUI there is no magic. We need something that advances the GUI, doesn't take a huge step back just for Grandma.

And your point is? Without GUI there is no magic. We need something that advances the GUI, doesn't take a huge step back just for Grandma.

In fairness to aludanyi, you said that the magic was lost when they started dumbing it down so that more people could use a computer. The GUI was probably the biggest step towards doing that. Before you just had the command line which wasn't very intuitive for your average joe.

So really, when you say that the magic was gone when they started dumbing it down for Grandma, what you mean is that the magic was lost when they started locking everything down so that your average person couldn't easily break their machine.

I've lost some of the magic feeling, I think Win 7 was the last OS I actually got even slightly excited about when builds leaked, Vista I was jumping up and down each new leak, I didn't really have much interest in 8 even though my younger self would have not been able to sleep with such a radical change as the new UI

I used to get excited during Vista leaks even if the only change was a new sound or icon :laugh:

I think it is age, I feel like I am fighting a losing battle against boringness, I get the odd moment here and there where I`ll head over to BA and grab an old Beta of some OS and play with it in VMWare but it lasts only up until the first crash or error and I return to just wanting a working machine again

Yeah I agree so much with this! :D What I miss the most from these days is entire communities analyzing the workings of Vista and making mods, new skins and themes, unlocking Aero and whatnot while nowadays I feel like no community is really interested in Windows 8 and if anything there are maybe five people making mods for it :( Oh well maybe it will happen with Win9 again who knows^^

there just isn't any good hype anymore... and not I'm not talking about Apples hype machine...... I'm talking about tech that people think wow that is awesome and never done before... when the first Mac came out it was a wow... when the first smart phone (it was an IBM device in 1992 called the Simon, and no it was not the Apple newton which came out in 1993) came out way way back it was a wow... first tablet in the late 90's...

The magic is just beginning. I can't wait to see where mobile technology goes in the next few years. I'm planning to move to a tablet over this year.

The magic started dying when they started dumbing everything so that grandma could use it.

Boo hoo.

for me, the magic was to creates a working program in assembly languages,

it was common during Dos era,

dwindling in x86 windows era,

almost disapears in current 64-bit OS.

"what ###### is that", its the common response when I tried to preach about assembly to 64-bit masses.

when the first Mac came out it was a wow

And remember the Mac's tagline? "The Computer for the rest of us" ? It wasn't the techies among us who the Mac was trying to wow...the iPad and such devices today are only a logical extension of that. And certainly today, techies are not who the market caters to anymore. Which doesn't mean that there aren't exciting areas and diy projects to work on, play and tinker with for hobbyists, but it simply isn't the mainstream anymore, which imo is actually a very good thing. And in the end, someone still has to program all those wonderful new easy to use devices.

I laugh at today's youth who think they "know" computing simply because they know how to run a few apps or navigate their way around a dumbed down OS. Yet, ask them a networking question or ask them to code something and they are at a complete loss.

I abhor coding. I won't go near it with an infinite foot pole. You can keep it.

for me, the magic was to creates a working program in assembly languages,

it was common during Dos era,

dwindling in x86 windows era,

almost disapears in current 64-bit OS.

"what ###### is that", its the common response when I tried to preach about assembly to 64-bit masses.

Ah assembly.... I remember in comp sci when people took assembly they thought it was "an out dated dead language"..... yeah the closest thing to machine code is dead.... wish people would realize what complining and linking is actually doing... and that assembly can get you stuff done much faster then some of the predesigned libraries and functions... hence why we have __asm in C++ and similar things in some other languages...

And remember the Mac's tagline? "The Computer for the rest of us" ? It wasn't the techies among us who the Mac was trying to wow...the iPad and such devices today are only a logical extension of that. And certainly today, techies are not who the market caters to anymore. Which doesn't mean that there aren't exciting areas and diy projects to work on, play and tinker with for hobbyists, but it simply isn't the mainstream anymore, which imo is actually a very good thing. And in the end, someone still has to program all those wonderful new easy to use devices.

yeah but it was something new and different... it had a GUI based OS which was not common, hence the wow factor..... wow != dumbing down, it means something new that hasn't been widely done before..... iPhone wasn't a "wow" because smart phones existed before it.... iPad wasn't a wow, because honestly it was just a bigger iPhone.... iPod wasn't a wow, because there was hundreds of MP3 players before it.....

iMac Mini was kinda a wow because it was so small and compressed.... Touch screens where kinda a wow factor because average users couldn't afford them or have a use for them until recently... Bluray should of been a wow but the internet ruined that.... because there was no high def high fidelity storage method... internet still can't match 1:1 blu-ray quality streaming.... TiVo was a wow because DVR was a new idea

I abhor coding. I won't go near it with an infinite foot pole. You can keep it.

LoL... you say that only because you can't have it, not in a million years. If you are capable to construct software, there is no such force in the Universe which is able to prevent you from doing it, it is the ultimate pleasure for the mind.If you aren't capable, then you hate it, or abhor it as you say, and you want to run away from it as fast as you can as far as possible. I guess, there can't be magic without wizards... :)

there just isn't any good hype anymore... and not I'm not talking about Apples hype machine...... I'm talking about tech that people think wow that is awesome and never done before... when the first Mac came out it was a wow... when the first smart phone (it was an IBM device in 1992 called the Simon, and no it was not the Apple newton which came out in 1993) came out way way back it was a wow... first tablet in the late 90's...

The last time I felt that was during the

when he skydived and broadcast it live, then entered the stage after having just skydived. Along with the
. I can't wait for Google Glass to become a mainstream product! I can imagine people at beaches can, though. Haha!
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Waymo recalls self-driving software after cars enter closed freeway work zones by Paul Hill Waymo, the self-driving car maker owned by Alphabet – the parent company of Google –, has recalled some of its fifth-generation Automated Driving Systems (ADS). It did so after some of its cars drove through closed construction zones. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the affected vehicles were capable of driving through a closed freeway construction zone and continuing to drive at speed. The listing on the NHTSA website says that Waymo is currently developing a solution to fix this issue, but in the meantime, freeway driving is being restricted. Waymo will update its ADS software so that vehicles can detect when they can avoid entering construction zones. According to the Safety Recall Report, on April 20, 2026, Waymo’s Field Safety Committee began meetings reviewing an event from April 11, 2026, and five events from April 19, 2026, where Waymo’s autonomous vehicles didn’t recognize and drove past ramp closure signs into the pre-planned freeway construction zones. This took place in Phoenix, Arizona. Separately, on May 18, 2026, seven Waymo vehicles entered freeway lanes with active construction in the San Francisco Bay Area by driving between cones that were placed to show the lane was closed. On the back of both of these events, Waymo restricted freeway driving until it could address the issue. In June, Waymo’s Safety Board reviewed the issue and additional information related to ADS performances around construction zones; then, as a result, it decided to conduct a recall. This development is not good for Waymo as it adds to a growing list of technical hiccups its cars have experienced. Ultimately, it will lead to more scrutiny from lawmakers around the world who will be more cautious about letting autonomous vehicles on their roads without tighter regulation. For readers in areas where Waymo operates, does this news make you more wary about stepping into one of these vehicles?
    • I'm still on Windows 10 22H2 because I didn't want to deal with all the issues in Windows 11, so I waited almost a week before installing the latest Patch Tuesday update (KB5094127), I went ahead and did it, and it was a huge mistake—ever since then, my File Explorer has seen a performance drop of about 30% when transferring large files... Once again, Microsoft has outdone itself! This update cannot be uninstalled, either through the Control Panel (via Settings) or by accessing Advanced Startup Options. The only possible alternative would be to use system restore points, but I’d have to reinstall all app and driver updates (and there’s no guarantee it would work). Or there’s the “nuclear option” of a in-place repair without losing files or apps, but even then, all my customizations would be lost! Microsoft just can’t help but mess everything up! Way to go, Microsoft! But I still don’t want your c****y Windows 11!
    • Microsoft: Windows 11 could finally solve a major issue across AMD, Nvidia, and Intel GPUs by Sayan Sen While Microsoft has been trying to improve it, Windows 11 is definitely not flawless, as even today some issues are taking a year to publicly acknowledge. However, one area of trouble that may finally see much better results soon is graphics driver crashes. Work on graphics driver timeouts, also called Timeout and Detection Recovery (TDR), is not new as the latest WDDM 3.2 also has specific improvements regarding it. Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM) version 3.2 is supported on Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2. However, with the upcoming version 26H2, TDR crash diagnosis could go to the next level as Microsoft is introducing a new DirectX 12 API feature called "DirectX Dump Files". Similar to how system memory dump files work when a system crashes or freezes or encounters any such major issue, DirectX Dump Files (DDF) will essentially record a snapshot of the GPU execution right at the moment a graphics-related crash or hang or freeze occurs, so that developers can better understand and diagnoze these TDR and timeout detection errors. The dump will be available as a .dxdmp file for analysis and it will be a comprehensive dump file generated with detailed insights about the hardware, drivers, Windows, as well as the affected application. This should be another welcome change in this department. Earlier at GDC 2026, when the technology was first debuted, Microsoft had shared more details regarding it. The company had explained how DDF is designed to gather data from every layer of the graphics stack into a single file, eliminating the need for developers to manually correlate logs from multiple tools. As mentioned above, the dump can contain a lot of useful details like GPU hardware state information such as register values, shader program counters, page fault virtual addresses, shader memory data, and command buffers. Alongside that, it also captures DirectX runtime and kernel information, including D3D objects, pipeline state objects, device error data, adapter details, and CPU call stacks. Microsoft says the feature has been built around two primary use cases: retail device removals and local device removals. The former allows developers to collect crash information from end users' systems in the field, while the latter helps QA teams and developers investigate issues on test machines. Developers will also be able to include up to 2 MB of custom application data through new D3D12 APIs, providing additional context for troubleshooting. In addition, Microsoft is introducing three dump collection modes ranging from zero-overhead capture, which has no runtime performance impact on supported hardware, to higher-detail modes that collect more vendor-specific debugging data. On compatible Tier 2 hardware, zero-overhead dumps will be enabled by default, meaning developers may begin receiving useful crash diagnostics without making any code changes. The table below explains the three tiers: Tier Description NO_OVERHEAD Enables crash capture with no runtime cost and is suitable for broad deployment MEDIUM_OVERHEAD Provides a balance, capturing additional diagnostic data with moderate impact HIGH_OVERHEAD Collects the most detailed GPU and driver state available, enabling deeper investigation at the cost of higher runtime overhead In terms of availability, the company expects broader release to be around the fall of 2026, which should be right around the time when Windows 11 version 26H2 lands. Right now, DirectX Dump Files are available as a preview and currently, only AMD has the compatible AgilitySDK Developer Preview driver version 26.10.07.02. You can find the official announcement post here on Microsoft's website.
    • And with SO much better perf than the laggy mess that is Files.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      BizSAR earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Jordan Smith earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Reacting Well
      BizSAR earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      598
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      190
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      80
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      76
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!