sunglocto@lemmy.dbzer0.com to pics@lemmy.worldEnglish · 19 hours ago5 MB hard drive in 1956lemmy.dbzer0.comimagemessage-square71fedilinkarrow-up1484arrow-down14
arrow-up1480arrow-down1image5 MB hard drive in 1956lemmy.dbzer0.comsunglocto@lemmy.dbzer0.com to pics@lemmy.worldEnglish · 19 hours agomessage-square71fedilink
minus-squaredarkdemize@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up4·18 hours agoAnd now I have a phone capable of taking photos too large to be stored on that drive. Crazy how quickly technology can progress.
minus-squaremerde alors@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up5·18 hours ago Crazy how quickly technology can progress. 70 years is a long loooooooooooooooooong time for “technology”
minus-squaredrosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zonelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·10 hours agoIt is nowadays, and it is in RF and digital electronics, but that’s far from universal.
minus-squareGiuseppeAndTheYeti@midwest.sociallinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·11 hours agoI mean, yeah, that’s what he was getting at. How 70 years seems like a long time in the context of modern technology despite being very short in the sense of human history.
minus-squareshalafi@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·16 hours agoOnly recently! For the past 10,000 years a 70-year span would not see a single significant change. (If I mix this up, someone correct me.) I think it was at Olduvai, or somewhere in the Great Rift Valley, that hominids spent 600,000 years hammering out the same exact stone tools.
minus-squaremerde alors@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up1·13 hours agothat’s why i put “technology” in quotation marks.
And now I have a phone capable of taking photos too large to be stored on that drive. Crazy how quickly technology can progress.
70 years is a long loooooooooooooooooong time for “technology”
It is nowadays, and it is in RF and digital electronics, but that’s far from universal.
I mean, yeah, that’s what he was getting at. How 70 years seems like a long time in the context of modern technology despite being very short in the sense of human history.
Only recently! For the past 10,000 years a 70-year span would not see a single significant change.
(If I mix this up, someone correct me.)
I think it was at Olduvai, or somewhere in the Great Rift Valley, that hominids spent 600,000 years hammering out the same exact stone tools.
that’s why i put “technology” in quotation marks.