←back to thread

247 points simonebrunozzi | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
analogpixel ◴[] No.46237814[source]
I've been noticing lately, at least for myself, that useful technology stopped happening like 10-20 years ago. If all you could use was tech from 2000 and before you would have a pretty stable stack that just worked (without a monthly subscription.)

There is also this article today: https://jon.recoil.org/blog/2025/12/an-svg-is-all-you-need.h... about how great good ol' svg is. And then every recurring article about using RSS instead of all the other siloed products.

textfiles, makefiles, perl, php, rss, text based email, news groups, irc, icq, vim/emacs, sed, awk; all better than the crap they have spawned that is supposed to be "better".

Out of curiosity, what technology in the past 5 years do you use that you actually find better than something from 20 years ago?

replies(16): >>46237898 #>>46238286 #>>46238745 #>>46238841 #>>46238842 #>>46239106 #>>46239449 #>>46239849 #>>46239850 #>>46239910 #>>46240493 #>>46240958 #>>46241408 #>>46241498 #>>46241632 #>>46242641 #
Mongoose ◴[] No.46237898[source]
I'd say Obsidian (just over five years old, since its first release), which is ironic because it's basically just a UI on top of text files.
replies(4): >>46237935 #>>46238308 #>>46238979 #>>46239623 #
1. analogpixel ◴[] No.46237935[source]
I'd definitely agree with you on that one. Also notice how the company doesn't push monthly subscriptions on people and just lets their program exist out there.