Fun Topic. Our generation's perception in the future

Talk about just about anything else that is non-gaming here, but keep it clean
User avatar
RCBH928
Next-Gen
Posts: 6082
Joined: Wed Apr 02, 2008 6:40 am

Re: Fun Topic. Our generation's perception in the future

Post by RCBH928 »

I forgot about reality show, I think its big icon of the late 90's and 2000. I think those shows will die in the future.
The sound of the modem is right, I loved that sound, back then you actually feel "you are now connected to the world wide web" . You have entered cyberspace, now you are always connected either you like it or not.

I think future generation will be just lazier than us and more connected to a screen like tv or games.

But still, 90-2000 has no one look that differentiate them on the opposite of earlier decades like 80's-70's-60's....
you think that because things change too fast for one style or thing to stay stable for long enough? Anything 2 years ago is just too old now
User avatar
Octopod
Next-Gen
Posts: 2653
Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2008 9:44 am

Re: Fun Topic. Our generation's perception in the future

Post by Octopod »

hashiriya1 wrote:Self-serving, self-righteous, easily-entertained, fat, lazy, high, with an unjustifiable sense of entitlement. That's my generation, woooooo.
That pretty much sums it up.
User avatar
General Chaos
128-bit
Posts: 696
Joined: Mon Dec 17, 2007 7:51 pm
Location: Toronto

Re: Fun Topic. Our generation's perception in the future

Post by General Chaos »

hashiriya1 wrote:Self-serving, self-righteous, easily-entertained, fat, lazy, high, with an unjustifiable sense of entitlement. That's my generation, woooooo.

Why unjustifiable? Doesn't every generation stand to inherit the future? I think that's a pretty strong justification for feeling entitled to whatever that future might hold.

Also, I would argue that past generations have been entertained even more easily. Imagine your parents/grand parents gleaning weeks upon weeks of entertainment out of some little wooden toy. Our generation demands interactivity, the cost of which might be creativity on our part, but nevertheless I don't think that implies we are necessarily easily entertained.
Post Reply