Sunday, March 6, 2016

Back in My Day...

Technology changes so quickly that it becomes really easy to take it for granted. Over the past week I have been reflecting on how media has evolved over time, especially over the past 10-15 years. More specifically I have been thinking about the amazing advances we have experienced in "the Internet age".

Long gone are the days of dial-up Internet. (For a trip down memory lane, click here) And don't get me wrong, I'm glad they're gone! Remember what a pain it was when you were online and someone needed to make a phone call? Not only has the way we access the Internet changed (Thank you Google Fiber!), but the Internet really has revolutionized the world and the way we live our lives.

A few months ago I was talking to my younger brother (age 9) about "the world before YouTube". He loves to go on YouTube and watch videos uploaded by YouTubers of themselves playing Minecraft. Studio C sketches are also among his favorite videos to watch. The conversation went something like this:

"You don't even know how spoiled you are to have shows and videos available whenever you want. When I was your age, if we wanted to watch a show any time we felt like it, we first had to record it. We had to make sure the Satellite box was set to record the show at the right time, that the VCR was set up properly so it would record, and that a VHS tape was in the VCR. We also had to make sure the tape was set to the right spot so we didn't record over something that was already on there."

My sister (now age 19) and I used to record a number of the shows that were on Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, and Cartoon Network in the late 90s and early 2000s (e.g., Jimmy Neutron, Rugrats, Even Stevens, Recess, Doug, Dexter's Laboratory, Ed, Edd & Eddy, etc.). We still have a few of these tapes, but they do little more than collect dust now. A quick search for any of these shows on YouTube will bring up thousands upon thousands of results! Plenty of clips are available on there, but even full episodes are available in some cases. Nowadays, if my younger siblings want to watch a show that currently airs on one of these channels they can open the channel's app on a tablet and have access to full episodes of a dozen different shows.

Earlier this week I looked up the Republican debates on YouTube since I have not watched any of the more recent ones. Later in the week I remembered the conversation I had with my brother about recording shows back in the day. I realized how I had taken for granted the fact that any of the debates I wanted to watch would be available online, and so easily accessible. Twenty years ago if I had missed the debate when it originally aired and did not record it I would have been out of luck. We really do live in an incredible time!

When I stop and think about how technology has changed in my lifetime alone I can only imagine what it will be like for my own children. I remember asking my sister (now age 8) to put a VHS tape in the VCR (before they were all donated to Deseret Industries about a year ago), and though I can not recall what she asked at the time, I do remember that she had no clue how the VCR worked. This did not necessarily come as a surprise, but it was certainly a testament to just how much the times have changed!

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