The proliferation of electric bikes
And Linux software, the Proton wrapper for games on steam changed a lot of the statistics around Linux adoption
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The proliferation of electric bikes
And Linux software, the Proton wrapper for games on steam changed a lot of the statistics around Linux adoption
I'm a longtime Linux user now but I still remember the day Proton dropped, seeing 95% of my games suddenly run on my system was kind of amazing.
3D printers, hands down. These used to be ridiculously expensive, janky pieces of technology that fought against you every step of the way and gave you shit results. Nowadays you can just buy one, put the parts together, plug it in and start printing straight away. They've come a really really long way in the last ten years.
As for how they've improved my life, I don't even know where to start lol I've made countless woodworking jigs which would have cost me a ton of money. I've made several replacement parts and adapters for things that I use at home. I've made a ton of fidget toys to keep my ADHD ass entertained during video calls.
3D printers are cool and you should make sure that you have one if there's ever a healthcare insurance shareholder conference in your city.
why are you putting down GPS and epub/eReaders both of these technologies were basically solved by 2015. In fact I'd go so far as to say ereaders have stagnated in the past decade because they keep throwing shit at the wall hoping it'll stick (what if you could...use your ereader as a digital notebook?? if you use our $800 ereader you can do that!! What, you're just looking for an e-ink that isn't going to display ads at you 24/7 like the Kindle? China has been making some great things and it has taken Amazon years to catch up. Oh there's a new color e-ink kindle out this year? wow the Boox Poke 2 came out in like 2011
Ebikes is like...ok sure I guess, various startups like Lime didn't really get rolling til 2015 or so...NYC's Citibike didn't start until 2013 so this is one of those threshold cases...
Zoom - have you fucks never heard of Pidgin or MSN Messenger?? Both were offering video calls exactly like Skype and subsequently Zoom. Don't you even think about Discord it has built its empire upon the bones and corpses of the great ones before it like Trilian and Teamspeak & again - it is not a breakthrough to release a 'easier' or more user friendly messaging app.
dunno why i got titled reading the comments on this post i think i didn't get enough sleep last night.....
HIV prevention drugs that last 6 months were just invented this year. We could end HIV transmission globally.
This is one of the best answers in this thread I think
It easily feels as though technology is stagnating when capitalism cannibalises everything that can be used to alienate and placate workers.
A few big ones:
Solar technology is now cheaper and more efficient both economically and materially than fossil fuels.
MRNA vaccines went from theory to revolutionising vaccine research with implications across diseases we've already created therapies for.
Neural networks have genuinely done good things for medical sciences, physics, engineering.
3D printing has made our appliances and devices more repairable than ever, and allows partisans to subvert the state's monopoly on violence in new and ingenious ways.
Modern communication software and the encryption behind them has given modern socialist movements secure and anonymous communications that even the most powerful intelligence services cannot penetrate without social engineering.
that's all stuff that helps me but there's many more I bet
Modern communication software and the encryption behind them has given modern socialist movements secure and anonymous communications that even the most powerful intelligence services cannot penetrate without social engineering.
Danger. They don't need social engineering, they can hack you. They can hack your iphone, your carrier will help them. They can hack your computer, your ISP will help them. Are they doing this all the time to everyone? No, it's not practical and more use raises more chances of your tools and methods being detected. Should organizers be wary of the limits of their abilities to secure their electronic communications on devices that are likely compromised with backdoors at the hardware level? Absolutely. Even regular cops can use zionist cyberweapons they purchase to hack racial justice organizers, what the NSA and CIA have are even nicer but totally classified.
Do use encryption, do make it so your data can't be easily subpoenaed or siphoned up in bulk collection. Do make it harder on them. Do force them to burn expensive methods if they ever try and produce anything they have in court. But do not think it makes you totally invulnerable if you get on their radar and they want to get that info as it does not.
Hexbear.
advances in medical technology definitely
theres a lot of "niches" in medicine where the tech and research advances really quickly and its not really talked about
The Rise and Fall of American Growth by Robert J. Gordon covers this thesis more broadly, that "tech" has stagnated and will never repeat the amazing productivity gains and life improvement we saw in the early 20th century because the jump from like computer to faster computer has no meaningful impact on somebody's life compared to like getting indoor plumbing and electricity. Really well researched and convincing imo.
As someone said before: e-bikes. I don’t have one but I still think they’re cool.
Zoom calls are great, they’re almost everything I liked about the video call technology you see in the pokemon anime.
This is a big one since I live way out in the boonies and it’s the most accessible to me: I also like some of the improvements to vegan food, I’m following perfect day dairy right now because I really want to see animal-free cheese in my lifetime. Not just because it’s kind to animals but imagine abundant organic cheeses that’s affordable to the masses. I’ve even noticed that some plant-based meat has evolved to be better than nutrislop you see right-wing comics fearmonger about.
It’s a small thing but animation technology has improved and hasn’t taken the love out of some of my favorite animation: Spy Family is gorgeous and Pixar’s Luca was really colorful and well designed.
I’ve seen a couple kinda cool smart mirrors and I wish I was better at coding so I can make one. But I seem to just be horrible at coding lmao.
Every so often I have to tell myself I’m not a Luddite, I don’t hate tech I hate the “why” behind most tech.
Hard drives are a lot bigger and cheaper. Internet a lot faster and cheaper especially in developing countries thanks to cheap fiber
For me currently, probably portable vegan food since I am currently a delivery driver and I get no breaks because I need to deliver 300 packages in 10 hours.
I upgraded to SSD in this time period. They're fast.
I like my airfryer? lmao
Guitar plugins have gotten really nice. Instead of paying a small fortune for an amp, cab, pedal board, mics, etc. you can just get an audio interface and a NeuralDSP plug-in for 150 bucks together and just plug in your guitar and play. Fantastic for poor people like me.
Wireless headphones becoming mainstream (both like fully wireless or the ones that sit on top of your head) have been a game changer for me. The sound quality isn't amazing, but I used to suffer cables tangling, one of the headphones dying and not justifying buying new ones until they died for good every few months. When you have sensory issues and didn't realize you had them, it has really helped.
I've had the same fully wireless headphones I use everywhere to minimize sensory overstimulation for four years and they're fine.
Definitely noise cancelling has improved significantly within the last decade, and it's been super handy for me. I love being able to just turn off the noise when I'm on a plane, or the loud person on the bus or train.
Mics on the same headphones seem much better too; in all the cases where i'd previously need to check on the phone "can you hear me!?", now they just always can.
And as pointed out somewhere else in the thread, it's gotten cheap, too. I got some over-ear headphones I wear on planes or on the train, and they have really good noise canceling, for under 50 dollars when I bought them. They're not as good as Sennheiser or Sony, but they're 1/6 of the price so pretty good ANC is more than plenty.
BTW, love the username and profile pic. Petrodragonic apocalypse is maybe top 2 KG&LZ albums to me.
My 5G chip implant prevents me from getting coronavirus
Not sure this qualifies as a breakthrough and I'm not sure what the silicomancers did to accomplish this, but I have a 1tb flash drive the size of my index finger with a chunk of my movies and my entire audio library in high bitrate mp3 and a good subset of my flacs
Slippi/rollback netcode for melee is an incredible technological achievement (which nintendo could not engineer in more "sophisticated" implementations of smash that had access to entire teams of developers) that allows me to continue to play melee even though due to covid I can't really participate in that community in person the way I could prior to 2020
The only other breakthroughs I think I encounter these days are subtle. My laptop isn't much faster or more powerful than the one I had in 2015, but the battery lasts 3x as long doing the same tasks. My ereader has a backlight and only needs to be charged once every 2 weeks.
That said, the grifts are pervasive and it definitely feels like we're not making the same kinds of qualitative leaps in technological capability that we were even 20 years ago.
Adblock
Signal and Telegram (not fucking META chat apps, tho)
Google translate has gotten very good. Also open source AI translation & subtitle software is much better if you know how to do command line stuff.
I might be wrong, but it feels easier to get into Linux now.
Adblock
Adblockers have been around at least since the 00s, if not earlier. It's a cat-and-mouse game between ads and adblockers, and adblockers are losing imo. Stuff like adblockers and noscript are ultimately attempts at debloating webpages which are reactive measures against webpages being ever more bloated.
I might be wrong, but it feels easier to get into Linux now.
This is 100% true. There's a huge difference even between Linux now and Linux 5 years ago.
The cybertruck has been an incredible source of entertainment
GPS and maps on phone along with train and bus tracking wherever i am and easier taxi booking. This enabled me to do things i otherwise never would have done and afforded a degree of spontaneity that helped me build a lot of friendships. Without this I probably wouldn't have ever gone outside. I know this stuff is a bit older than a decade but i didn't get a smart phone until quite late lol
Accessible game development tools have seen a lot of improvements, it's really good for indie devs (except for Unity ofc, fuck Unity, Godot ftw)
Calling Zoom a "breakthrough" doesn't sit right to me. I like your other word "improvement" better for something like this.
However if we're using a more expansive definition of breakthrough, my answer is Disco Elysium
For me professionally: managed cloud-hosted services have come along considerably (aws aurora in particular is really slick) and processor improvements have allowed me to scale down the fleet of servers I manage (less power and $ usage is great)
Like someone else mentioned, mRNA vaccines for sure.
Cellphone infrastructure, i live out in the sticks and didn't reliably get service in my area until 2-3 years ago
active noise cancellation in headphones has gotten a lot better in the last 10 years for sure, adding ANC to earbuds has been a gamechanger for my autistic ass
Regrettably, some internet-connected devices have also been really useful from an accessibility standpoint for me too. Just getting push notifications when my laundry is done has been a huge help with ADHD-related laundry struggles
Oh and the proliferation of backup cameras in cars has been very nice (albeit not as nice as widespread reliable public transit would be)
the proliferation of backup cameras in cars has been very nice
Keep in mind this only happened in compensation for a decrease in rear visibility. The cameras were added because it would be impossible to back up otherwise. Though, I agree with the overall point that safety features have improved a lot: collision warning/braking, IR parking sensors, lane keep assist, adaptive cruise (if you can get it).
I'm having a hard time even thinking of significant technological breakthroughs from the last 10 years. It seems like we're in an incremental improvement plateau. Someone said mRNA vaccines and that's a good one. "AI" is mostly a grift, but I do like the call screening feature on my Android phone; I basically never get bothered by spam calls anymore, because a robot screens all my calls and doesn't ring my phone unless it's someone I know or the caller can articulate what they want. That's nice I guess.
Gene therapy & mRNA vaccines seem to have kicked off in the last decade.
As someone who works in IT, I don't think anything has. I was thinking SSDs, but they became good by ~2013 really. Phones are still garbage in my experience. AI is probably the closest to being slightly useful, at times. Honestly, as someone who used free Skype extensively back around ~2010, I don't find Zoom to be meaningfully better (and I've yet to find anything beat Skype's original noise-cancelling algorithm).
No, I've really thought and genuinely have nothing else. If technology regressed 10 years I think I'd personally be unaffected (and happier, I could avoid upgrading my hardware for so long).
And as they say, hardware being ever faster is balanced by software being ever more bloated. The only exception is SSDs which makes booting a lot faster and solves a lot of issues inherent with HDDs being electromechanical instead of being pure electronics, but I don't see a major difference in SSDs between 2015 and now outside of them becoming cheaper.
Most all of the FOSS alternatives that have popped up over the last ten years have been major. There is a decent FOSS alternative for just about everything I need on the computer.
My Steam Deck.
Also, I love my smart watch. It makes things easier and helps keep up on my health.
Then compared to a decade ago, android phones and the OS have gotten a ton better.
Also, solar has gotten a lot cheaper and many electric companies have started storing electricity in large zinc batteries to reduce pollution and prevent brown outs.
EV cars suck less, but they still aren't quite ready to replace gas completely. I think that will happen over the next decade.
Really, just the internet sucks more now.
I was going to say Instant Pot, but that came out in 2010. Linux got better, but that's mostly incremental changes rather than a really big change on top of Windows getting a lot shittier. I guess there's RISC-V CPUs, but those aren't commercial products, so at best, you can say that RISC-V CPUs can be the technological breakthrough that we're missing.
there are none and no one in this thread have posted any. GPS? ever heard of a map? wireless earbuds? yeah i love worse sound quality and throwing lithium into the landfill. SSDs? yeah i love it when my slop machine gets me faster to my slop
nothing good has happened in the last thirty plus years
I thought I'd be cheeky and look up a list of shit that's come out since 2015 but was inundated with AI slop telling me about random bullshit so
Yeah it's all shit