• @[email protected]
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          46 days ago

          And I declare that calling someone a cunt now means that you like and respect that person. Please go ahead and use it on your boss next time you see them.

      • Estradiol Enjoyer
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        67 days ago

        CD players were first sold in 1982, when Boomers (if the baby boom started 1945) were hitting their 40s and established in every industry. I think they were actually the perfect demographic to be able to afford a CD player when it first came out.

          • @[email protected]
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            137 days ago

            As someone who worked sales in that time period, yes, it was the younger crowd (Gen X) that adapted much better to burning CDs. A lot of the baby boomers had difficulty with understanding certain key concepts and details. … And instructions to be honest…

            As for the “Boomer” commenter above: the military and government in the USA still burns to CD for a variety of reasons (no, I won’t go into them). So if someone is military, a government employee, or even just a contractor, there is a chance that at some point they will need to burn a CD, regardless of age.

            • @[email protected]
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              27 days ago

              Really? Cause in my time in the army I never once saw any kind of military information being saved to cd. Not once. Never. Even in the early 2000s that was just never a thing. Ever.

              • @[email protected]
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                15 days ago

                Sounds like you might not have been part of a team that needed to do so. In the environments I had been part of, they had requirements for it.

                • @[email protected]
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                  14 days ago

                  We always used a black box thing, can’t remember what it was called, to load cypher to anything that was military equipment like radios and nav systems, and thumb drives for anything else.

              • @[email protected]
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                36 days ago

                I requested my medical records from my time in the military in 2014 and received them on CD. Which was funny because I didn’t have a computer that could read them at the time, and I still haven’t read them. Turns out the information i needed was already available to the people giving my c&p exam

                • @[email protected]
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                  47 days ago

                  Indeed, but I actually like this system: There are no breachable servers between the doctor and the patient, at least a few years ago everyone had a CD drive at home (I know that’s changing), and handing out a disk is way cheaper than a flash drive.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    36 days ago

                    Yeah the CD being cheaper than the USB drive is a great argument for this use case. Unfortunately you can then make the argument that it’s even cheaper to just upload the data to some website. Which then requires you to register, and then sells all your data, and then your private shit eventually ends up on the dark web when they get breached because they cheaped out on IT costs.

          • @[email protected]
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            57 days ago

            It’s a gen-x thing, you know, the forgotten generation.

            Lived through the “DOUBLE SPEED!!!” reader up to the 52 some read-write-rewrite.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 days ago

            I’m in my 40s now and I definitely did not burn near as many CDs as my dad did (he was born in '49)