In my latest blog post I suggested that even "bird site" may not have come into existence if we did not have net neutrality. Is this a fair statement?
@cc Good point. I forgot just how bad it used to be in the 1990s. I mean, I remember having to welcome all these AOL users to this mythical "rest of the Internet", just didn't make the net neutrality connection until now.
@skquinn Perhaps luckily for me, I grew up in a small town and my first internet connection was through a small local provider, as opposed to a large corp like AOL.
So the result was that my small company didn't offer any extra services. They just provided a dial up number to connect to and the rest was up to you to figure out.
Granted, the "figuring out" was a big frustrating at the time, but in hindsight I am grateful for it.
@cc That's how I started out as well. By the time AOL had begun flooding the market with their infamous Frisbees-with-an-installer-on-them, I had dumped Windows (at the time, for OS/2, but later for GNU/Linux). AOL on OS/2 was a non-starter; AOL on GNU/Linux was a definite no-go. So I had no choice but to use alternative local ISPs.
@skquinn I've always been a conformist, so I used Windows for a long time because everyone else did. Also, as you mentioned, it was a lot easier for compatibility reasons.
I never really loved Windows though. It was like being stuck in a loveless marriage.
Now I own a Mac because it's "pretty"
@cc Especially now that Apple is pushing this "walled garden" nonsense in iOS, and has made it impossible to buy a Mac without MacOS X on it, I feel uncomfortable giving Apple my money. That, and I value freedom a lot more now than I ever did (it's what I was after when I first had a desire to quit buying new versions of Windows and other Microsoft products, I just didn't realize it at the time).
@skquinn I become paralysed by the paradox of choice when I have too much freedom. When I had an Android phone, I wasted all my time downloading launchers and icon packs. That's probably why I lean towards conformity because it's less stressful and I can leave the burden of choice up to someone else.
Jony Ive knows what's best for me.