Sorry if this is a dumb question, but does anyone else feel like technology - specifically consumer tech - kinda peaked over a decade ago? I’m 37, and I remember being awed between like 2011 and 2014 with phones, voice assistants, smart home devices, and what websites were capable of. Now it seems like much of this stuff either hasn’t improved all that much, or is straight up worse than it used to be. Am I crazy? Have I just been out of the market for this stuff for too long?

  • Laurel Raven@lemmy.zip
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    2 hours ago

    Yes.

    Computers are the worst in my opinion, everything is tens to hundreds of times faster by specs and yet it feels as slow as it did in the 90s, I swear.

    Network speeds are faster than ever but websites load tons of junk that have nothing to do with the content you’re after, and the networks are run by corpos who only care about making money, and when they have no competition and you need their service, why would they invest in making their systems work better?

  • futatorius@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    That was when innovation slowed down and rent-seeking increased, once the big players started exploiting their oiligopolies in earnest.

  • szczuroarturo@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Not really peaked. More like we entered the era of diminishing returns which btw is great if you are not blinded by the marketing. Mid to low range phones are fairly cheap and more than adequate for almost anything . Do you know how shit even mid range phones were 10+ years ago and how fast they were getting too old to be usable. Right now its more than reasonable to use any smartphone for a 3 to 5 years and probably even longer ( before only champions like samsung Galaxy note 4 could even hope to match that ). Everything you talk about is cheaper and more afforable than ever before( if you do the usual and not buy overpriced brands beacuse of a brand like apple , galaxy phone , roomba robot vacuums etc… ). The only thing thats a shitshow right now are websites and computer prices precisly beacuse right now the current hype is LLM( which makes graphic cards really f expensive and kinda hits website by ricoshet due to the negative LLM influence ).

    Actually even as smartphones go there is a progress. Folding phones. Coincidently they are less relaiable and not as long lived . Exatcly as smartphones were 10 years ago.

    Also smartphones were something much grander than a simple tech innovation. They were truly a society changing innovation like cars, trains , planes or a computer. They just peaked much faster than cars , trains or planes. In fact they probably had bigger impact on society than computers.

  • Shardikprime@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Hell no. Fuck that shit

    We had like 500 form factors for phones, now it’s standardized

    Resistive touch screens? Ewww

    Like a billion mp3/MP4/ipod clones? Just to listen to music? A thing which now we can do easily on our phones?

    Slow ass ssd/nand memory chips?

    Freaking 1 core processors on phones, PCs and laptops?

    Seriously someone misses their devices behaving like slowpokes?

    Wireless audio devices that worked like shit unless they were extremely high end? Oh yeah wired worked great, but we were flooded with a ton of clones of those too. So no great quality from those “Skeleton Sweet” or “earpods”.

    Batteries that were in dire need of charge at least thrice a day?

    Wireless routers that with any luck had gains that allowed to step out of the room?

    Car wise, no stability control? You seriously fucking with stability control? That shit avoids like 25% of all car accidents globally

    Medical wise, CRISPR? gene therapy for muscular dystrophy? Vaccines that can be whipped out in months?

    Innovation slowing down? In what planet do you fuckers live on?

    I’d say more but I think you get my point

    • phlegmy@sh.itjust.works
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      12 hours ago

      10 years ago was 2014, not 2004.

      The samsung galaxy s5 was released at the start of 2014 with a capacitive 1080p amoled touchscreen, a quad core snapdragon 801 processor, 21h of ‘talk time’ battery, wireless charging, a fingerprint sensor, NFC, dual band 802.11ac wifi support, and emmc 5.0 storage (250 MB/s sequential read).

      New cars were mandated to have ESC in the US and the EU by 2014.

      There have definitely been many innovations since 2014, but most consumer technology upgrades have been iterative rather than innovative.

    • Rednax@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I don’t understand the downvotes. The tech may be less revolutionairy from the perspective of a user, but we absolutely made a lot of progress.

  • utopiah@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I work in VR and AR. I traveled to a conference this week to showcase demos of my work.

    I have in my backpack a headset that’s costing few hundred bucks and can spawn in front if your eyes 3D models you can directly manipulate with your hands or a pen.

    It just works.

    I even use it offline while flying.

    This didn’t exist 10years ago. It’s amazing.

    • Rednax@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It always amazes me how much professional uses VR/AR has, and what kind of stuff has been created for it by all sorts of industries. Some see it as a failure because the consumer variants have not seen revolutionairy improvements over the past years, but the industry around it is quickly growing. So many companies use it, that the technology doesn’t need games to survive.

  • Preflight_Tomato@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    I just had to book a flight.

    Frontier forces you to download an app now to check in (there is a well hidden option to do it on web, but the page never loads on laptop nor mobile in multiple browsers).

    I tried to rent a parking spot, and 2/4 places would not load quotes at all (again web and mobile and multiple browsers). I probably would’ve used one of the two that didn’t load if their sites had worked. Their loss I guess.

    I’d just like it to not feel like each interaction I have with technology, and I guess by extension the world, is becoming increasingly adversarial. The tech itself seems to keep getting better though.

  • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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    2 days ago

    I’ve been saying this for a while, and have estimated a similar 10-year time frame.

    Most new tech (except for medical advancements) doesn’t really benefit the average person. Instead, it just gives corporations and governments more data, more control, and the ability to squeeze more money out of us. They don’t represent actual improvements to society as a whole or to individual users.

  • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    This is industrialism. All tech does this. You may have also had some rose colored glasses about business.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Facebook’s AR glass prototype is fire. It’s too expensive to release to the public but in a few years…

    Tech in general isn’t accelerating as fast. Drives aren’t twice as big every year at half the price. Processors aren’t twice as fast. 2024 stuff is still better than 2021 stuff, but it’s not twice as good. A few things have take a couple steps backward as they try to wrangle AI data capture into our lives. Up until recently, we’ve been able to scale thing down, so the same thing, only smaller and faster, but we’re hitting the limit of that, which is why people are latching on to ML to distract us from the fact that our gaming system from 6 years ago is still fine.

  • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Technology? No.

    Consumer Electronics? Yes. Or at least there’s a debatable transition and cutoff point.

  • leadore@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Yes you are correct, it’s worse now. At first it was creative, innovative products that made things more convenient or fun, or at least didn’t harm its users. Now all the new things are made by immature egotistical billionaire techbros: generative AI which has ruined the internet by polluting it with so much shit you can’t get real information any more, not to mention using up all our power and water resources, the enshittification of Web 2.0, Web 3.0 that was pure shit from the get-go, IOT “smart” appliances like TVs, doorbells, thermostats, refrigerators that spy on you and your neighbors, shit “self-driving” killer cars that shouldn’t be allowed on the roads, whatever the hell that new VR Metaverse shit is, ads, ads, ads, ads, and on and on. It’s a tech dystopia.

  • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    Technology is still evolving at break neck speed. On the other hand, companies are degrading/restricting these new techs to make more money.

  • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    No, I prefer my 2020 phone over my 2014 one… But maybe that is not entirely what you want to mean in your post.

    You don’t need to upgrade your “tech” yearly though.