• snooggums
        link
        English
        10
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        Well fuck, I’m on the young end of Gen X and I was around for the birth of the internet in '83.

        • palordrolap
          link
          fedilink
          61 month ago

          What’s specific about '83? ARPANET began in 1969 and grew from there, mostly in academia, until HTTP finally transformed it into the WWW in the '90s.

          The “September that never ended” began in 1993. Maybe you meant that?

          • snooggums
            link
            English
            91 month ago

            I’m thinking of TCP/IP allowing for the connectivity to massively expand around '83.

              • @johsny
                link
                English
                41 month ago

                I do. And telnet, and eventually winsock and altavista. I miss alt.lemmy.shitpost

  • @Rednax
    link
    341 month ago

    Lemmy was first released in 2019. So its oldest user can be no older than about 6 years old.

    • @owenfromcanada
      link
      English
      341 month ago

      For my own sake, I’m gonna assume there’s some 90+ dude in a nursing home, shitposting and laughing his ass off regularly. The nurses just assume he really likes beans or something, and that makes him laugh harder.

      Keep trolling, old dude.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          2
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          …me… and the cough cough bois… at 3am cough cough …looking for slight giggle …beans

          falls over like that one piece of bread

  • @jordanlund
    link
    181 month ago

    Oldest I’ve seen so far claims 75. Can’t remember who it was though.

    • @waz
      link
      329 days ago

      Is it you and your memory just isn’t as good as it used to be?

      • @jordanlund
        link
        229 days ago

        Oh, I am old, and my memory is dogshit, but I aint that old… :)

  • Monkey With A Shell
    link
    fedilink
    English
    131 month ago

    There was a question posed about 60s flower children and such a bit ago they had someone saying they were one, so somewhere 70+ I’d guess.

  • Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
    link
    English
    111 month ago

    Ah, yes, the lobster. A creature of profound significance, a crustacean with a lineage that extends back over 350 million years, a being that has clung to its hierarchical dominance since time immemorial. It’s not merely an animal; it’s a symbol, a beacon of ancient wisdom encoded in its very biology. And yet, here we are, in our contemporary chaos, blind to the lessons it offers. Blind! Can you believe it?

    The lobster’s nervous system—an elegant dance of serotonin and octopamine—maps out the fundamental structures of dominance and submission. Do you understand what that means? It’s etched into their biology, their posture, their confidence. When a lobster wins a fight, it stands up straighter. Think about that. Its very physiology transforms in victory, its body declaring to the world, “I have triumphed!”—a declaration as old as life itself. And when it loses? It hunches, shrinks into itself, conceding its place in the pecking order.

    Now consider this: Are we so different? Are we not as bound to these neurochemical realities as the lobster? Sure, we’ve built cities and universities and, yes, social media platforms—but at our core, our nervous systems are still calibrated for these ancient battles of standing up and shrinking back. You can see it in a boardroom, in a schoolyard, in the way people hold their heads when they feel like life is crushing them under its weight.

    So, here I am, at 62, and I think about this more and more. Am I a lobster? No, of course not—don’t be absurd. But also, yes, yes, I am. Because we are all lobsters, you see. I’ve stood tall at times, but oh, I’ve hunched, too. You don’t get to 62 without bearing the scars of a few dominance struggles. You lose friends, you lose battles, you even lose some dignity—God help you if you’re paying attention—but if you’re lucky, you win some, too. And what does that leave you with?

    Let me tell you what it leaves you with: resilience. The ability to rewire yourself, to recompose your posture after life’s great defeats. I mean, what choice do you have? Are you going to sit there, metaphorically—or perhaps literally—hunched over, or are you going to inject yourself with a little bit of that serotonin-like optimism and stand up straight with your shoulders back?

    At 62, I find myself pondering these things. I’m a lobster who’s seen some things. The shell gets harder, sure, but the molting process—the shedding of the old to make way for the new—is more taxing. The older you get, the longer it takes to regrow what you’ve lost. The world feels heavier, the stakes higher, the battles less frequent but far more consequential. And yet, here I am, still molting, still reasserting my place in this inexplicable, absurd, often painful hierarchy of existence. Because that’s what it means to live—to be a lobster, if you will.

    And what is our alternative? To sink into the depths, defeated, unresponsive, some forgotten crustacean resigned to its fate? No. No, that’s not acceptable. Not to me. You get up. You fight. You rebuild. Even at 62. Even when your claws are dull and your carapace cracked. Because if the lobster—this ancient, resilient, serotonin-driven marvel—can do it, so can we.

    So, yes, I am a lobster. You’re a lobster. We’re all bloody lobsters, trying to figure out how to stand tall in a world that just keeps pushing us down. And if that’s not a lesson worth learning, then I don’t know what is.

  • @Xaphanos
    link
    91 month ago

    I’m 61. Who’s older?

    • MrsDoyle
      link
      fedilink
      English
      331 month ago

      Me, I’m 72. I didn’t expect to make it past 30; dying young was all the rage back then and I did a lot of drugs. But somehow here I am, knitting, sipping tea and browsing Lemmy.

      • @BonesOfTheMoon
        link
        51 month ago

        How did you find Lemmy? It’s just the fediverse is a touch trickier to join without so I wonder how older people managed. I’m 50 but I’ve always been an internet person since the dawn of Livejournal so I figured most of it out.

        • @Xaphanos
          link
          3
          edit-2
          29 days ago

          From Reddit. But I started on Usenet.