• I think you overestimate the rate of people who actually dealed with these issues. Rural car owners probably knew a lot how to do themselves, but many people still ran to the repair shop for small things (Source: my dad was a car mechanic in the 80s). In the same wake, how many kids do you think really had computers and messed around with them at the time? If half the kids in the 90s were computer nerds, nerds wouldnt have gotten bullied so much. Also the amount of millenials that i have to show around basic computer stuff at work is staggering.

    So all in all we overhype the prevalence of certain lifestyles because they are overrepresented in media and stories of people in our own bubble.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      Yeah exactly, I was one of only about three kids in my school year who knew how to do anything on a computer, there were some snes and megadrive owners but mostly just people didn’t even know tech existed.

      The reason we weren’t getting scammed is our only contact with the outside world was a landline which we had to fight for time on even without the internet.

      By the end of the 90s computer use was fairly common and people were falling for the dumbest shit, ‘if you don’t send this to five friends before midnight you’ll die’ and ‘just give me all your rare armour and I’ll double it and give it back’ The only reason we weren’t getting scammed for real money is that before PayPal the only people who could accept money online were multinational companies and banks - who all have much more elegant ways of scamming.

      We were just as gullible as any other generation.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      I think they may have been referring to back when cars were a new technology, like in the first half of the 20th century