intensely_human,

LAST LIVING WW2 VETERAN DIES AT 104

raubarno,

The storm of the U. S. Capitol would be the most shocking one, probably, as nobody dared to do that.

Also, 9/11 events, nuclear/thermonuclear bombs, nuclear power plant disasters, many things.

Technologically, the fact that an everyday laptop can deliver tens of billions of arithmetic instructions per second is still mind-boggling to me.

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Anything price related. Imagine telling anyone from 1920s that you paid 50 dollars for a piece of clothing.

tetris11,
@tetris11@lemmy.ml avatar

I paid 3.20 for a small loaf of bread. Fight me.

baatliwala,

That people from my country actually had the gall to behave like our country belonged to us and not white people.

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Bolivia?

baatliwala,

India, it’s not even been 80 years since we became independent

cashews_best_nut,

Imagine telling your countrymen that Rishi Sunak was Prime minister of the UK and Humza Yousaf was First minister of Scotland. 🙂

usernamesaredifficul,

“Russian control of Crimea contested”

“Egyptian controlled Suez blocked”

“France controls British power infrastructure”

vis4valentine,
@vis4valentine@lemmy.ml avatar

“A N***** WANTS TO BE PRESIDENT. AMERICA HAS LOST ITS WAYS TO INSANITY”

“F*****S PARADE AROUND THE CITY AND THEY WERENT SHOT AT FIRST SIGHT”

“PATRIOT ARRESTED FOR BURNING CROSSES”

“PEOPLE CLAIMING STATE AND CHURCH SHOULD BE SEPARATED ARE NOT FIT FOR OFFICE, THEY ARE COMMUNIST TRAITORS”

drislands,

I don’t know how many headlines would be talking about Communist traitors in 1923.

Dark_Arc,
@Dark_Arc@social.packetloss.gg avatar

“PEOPLE CLAIMING STATE AND CHURCH SHOULD BE SEPARATED ARE NOT FIT FOR OFFICE, THEY ARE COMMUNIST TRAITORS”

That’s more of a 50-70s thing. In the 1920s communism wasn’t a big idea in the US and God wasn’t in the pledge nor part of our national motto.

jaywalker,

The first Red Scare was in 1919 and communism was a big enough idea in the US that the government was putting communists in prison

intensely_human,

ALL KNOWLEDGE OF SOLONS LOST
Recent Poll: Zero Percent of Americans Thinking About Solons

tetris11,
@tetris11@lemmy.ml avatar

Ligmas have increased in popularity though

intensely_human,

In a hundred years, people will be reading this thread and asking their AI to define ligma. That AI will have been trained on all our comments

joel1974,

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • sbv,

    We’ve come so far.

    nx2,
    @nx2@feddit.de avatar

    What? Why is it becoming obsolet?

    kibiz0r,

    You can buy groceries from a mechanical grocer, but it’ll accuse you of shoplifting like three times while checking you out.

    ElBarto,
    @ElBarto@sh.itjust.works avatar

    I had one scream loud AF at me because I didn’t move my item to the bay in the microsecond it allowed.

    tetris11,
    @tetris11@lemmy.ml avatar

    while checking you out

    I’m sick of those suggestive robotic winks, and the vulgar gestures every time I scan a banana

    AlphaWizard,
    tetris11,
    @tetris11@lemmy.ml avatar

    What game is that?

    AlphaWizard,

    Atomic Heart

    AceFuzzLord,

    Definitely the fact that we have access to technology that allows us to effectively create and spread misinformation at lightning speed, all without having to leave the comfort of our homes. Misinformation that can be seen by millions of people across the globe in a matter of moments after it is created.

    intensely_human,

    I bet it’s the fact I can play through the Battle of the Somme as many times as I want, and die a hundred deaths each game, for fun

    skillissuer, (edited )
    @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    Quite a few people would be probably surprised that colonial empires are no more

    as for headlines: British PM Rishi Sunak negotiates Scottish independence with First Minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf

    skillissuer,
    @skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    also anything involving european union

    PolandIsAStateOfMind,
    @PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml avatar

    in 1923 that idea was not really that shocking and already talked about.

    Agent641, (edited )

    The only known sentence that is fatal to white british men circa 1900.

    tetris11,
    @tetris11@lemmy.ml avatar

    Neocolonialism is alive and well though. Today we have more slaves making more products, than ever before !

    ArumiOrnaught,

    You can have a heart transplant.

    ChaoticNeutralCzech,
    @ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.de avatar

    1923 people expected mechanical heart transplants to be available today

    Honytawk,

    Just an advertisement with a smiling black guy would do.

    HandwovenConsensus,
    bitsplease,

    feels a bit like cheating given that the man in the picture is clearly being presented as a server, not a consumer

    HandwovenConsensus,

    Fair. I didn’t understand what OP was getting at, so I took them literally. It seemed strange to ignore that white people in the early 20th loved depictions of smiling black people in servant roles.

    As for ads targeted at black consumers… now I’m curious. I know there were newspapers targeted at black readers. I wonder if they had ads.

    bitsplease, (edited )

    Yeah I think a better answer would’ve been “an ad with a black man smiling at his white wife

    For bonus points, make it clear in the ad that the man is a house husband and the wife is a working professional lol

    Meowoem,

    Give them a gay son marrying his partner, really blow some heads.

    Agent641,

    A photo of Obama in the oval office

    CanadaPlus,

    “Man fired for criticising homosexuality”, or maybe “man imprisoned for refusing to hire black person”.

    People are thinking about technology, but in 1923 people were very familiar with breathtaking technological change. The complete reversal of some social norms, on the other hand, would be almost existentially disturbing to these dudes who believe in the great benevolent Christian empires, and in some cases thought ending slavery was a mistake.

    I have to wonder what the residents of the 1920’s third world would think. I’m sure there would be many interesting perspectives.

    nnjethro, (edited )

    Those type of headlines upset way too many people today. It’s the point of the make America great again slogan.

    ryathal,

    I don’t think you realize how far tech has advanced in 100 years. Commercial flights didn’t really exist in their current form of scheduled flights between airports. Computers didn’t exist beyond mechanical ones that aren’t really comparable. Electricity was only in half of households in 1925. Telephone lines were only local and required manual switching by operators.

    Breathtaking technology in the 1920s has nothing on what we can do today.

    Goblin_Mode,

    I mean yeah but the point is that technological advancement was still a common occurance. Like, yeah a sensationalized article about self driving cars would blow some minds but to most i think it wouldn’t really make any bigger waves then basic cars already were at the time. How can they be blown away by the concept of self driving when the vehicle itself is so new and interesting you know? AI is so abstract that even today most people don’t understand it, 100 years ago it’d just be “another new thing” just like it is today… We are actually less accustomed to ground shaking new inventions so I’d argue that 100 years ago a lot of our modern tech would be less exciting given the regularity in which things were changing then.

    Social upheaval however is ALWAYS a huge deal, especially for the time. Bear in mind that Progressivism is a fairly new ideology in the States. For literally hundreds of years social change came at a snails pace and took serious, concerted effort. Nowadays we are on average much more open to change and accepting of diversity in all it’s forms, but there’s a reason everyone remembers the name Martin Luther King Jr., versus… Ruth Bader Ginsburg I guess?

    Aceticon,

    “XXI-century people carry in their pockets a machine that lets then see what’s happenning on the other side of the planet as it happens, check the biggest encyclopedia there is without having the go to a library, talk live to people anywhere in the World and which can calculate the most complex mathematical problems in a fraction of a second”.

    It’s not technological change that would be unimaginable but rather what ended up being done with it as, at least judging by SciFi films over the years, people tend to look at what they have and more or less lineraly project forward.

    I mean, look what what Metropolis expected the future would be or even the 1970s film and TV-series idea of the kind of materials, design and human machine interfaces the future would have (it’s kinda funny to look at the CRT-display-based “future” tech of 70s TV series).

    Mind you, socially mankind doesn’t seem to have evolved much in these 100 years, but in terms of Tech and the possibilities openned by it, it has.

    CanadaPlus,

    It’s a pattern that emerges over and over again. Technology is reasonably easy to predict (we’re still using 1920s physics after all) but the way people will react to and interact with technology is completely impossible to see coming. Like, our guesses are about as good as random chance; that’s why nobody saw PCs and smartphones coming and then turned around and poured a lot of money into 3D TVs and wearables.

    I don’t think it would be impossible to model somehow, but I’ve yet to see any convincing work in that direction.

    Meowoem,

    It’s an interesting one, the Tom Swift series from around 1910 has him in rocket ships using wireless photo telephones, electric rifles, and all sorts of sci-fi before world war one - it doesn’t have many female characters, certainly no gay characters.

    There is a suffragette character arguing for the right to vote in the 1910 novel, a right women wouldn’t gain for another ten years in the USA - so a hundred years ago they were in an era where the start of social change is beginning but to what extent people would expect that to continue is hard to say.

    Metropolis is an interesting example too because they did have more advanced AI than we currently have - the maschinenmench Maria; an often submissive, vulnerable, emotional, manipulative, motherly and generally very stereotypically (for the time) feminine character.

    I think people in the 1920s expected in the next century technology to advance a hundred miles and social issues to change maybe an inch. I can think of sci-fi from that era with black characters but none with an expectation of civil rights for those black characters.

    CanadaPlus,

    Yeah, but electrification, cars, antibiotics, many forms of sanitation, many forms of canning, radio, telephones of any kind, several forms of weapon and powered aircraft in general were new within living memory in the 20s. “It gets (much) better and more accessible” wouldn’t have surprised anyone. If we were going back 200 years you might have a point, and definitely would at 300.

    Actually, they didn’t understand how radio crystals (which are very rudimentary semiconductor diodes) worked at the time, but pretty much every other principle of physics used in modern technology was understood at that point. They just needed to finish quantum mechanics, and then figure out a few steps of application.

    xmunk,

    Most people spend more than three hours a day staring at a small mirror in their pocket that makes colorful dancing lights.

    AngryCommieKender,

    I, and the vast majority of the world, wander around with instant access to the sum total of human knowledge, as well as the ability to instantly talk with anyone else in the world that we know. Face to face in many cases these days. These devices also allow many of us to remember that *we have a universal translator in our pockets, so language isn’t even much of a barrier to communication and understanding each other.The vast majority of us use these wonderous devices to get into arguments with people we are extremely unlikely to ever meet in person.

    andrewta,

    I can’t believe you would say that. I am offended.

    bitsplease,

    The vast majority of us use these wonderous devices to get into arguments with people we are extremely unlikely to ever meet in person

    And also about things that we generally either don’t really care much about, or can’t actually do anything about lol

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • [email protected]
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • oklahoma
  • Socialism
  • KbinCafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • KamenRider
  • All magazines