Every waking day of every waking use of the devices I have, I find myself constantly fighting a lot with the shitty input and recognition of said input. Things I swore I clicked once but having to click twice or sometimes three times. Such lag input between the last time I clicked and to the time the function of whatever I had to click fucking functioned.

With phones it is obviously worse, with finger input being either too sensitive or too dulled to register, inquiring more touches just to get somewhere or to type something, along with the separated frustrations aside trying to type on awful keyboard interfaces.

Edit:

For clarification’s sakes, people are bringing up old computers and how you’ve had to go extra steps to make it work. That’s not what I’m talking about and I thought I had made it clear as possible.

I’m talking about with the way things have been with technology over the past 15 years. You would think with all of the millions and billions that get invested into making things snazzy, crisp and shiny, that they would function similarly. Except, no, things got lots of wrenches thrown into their design phases to make them laggy, drag and otherwise shitty.

Phones, Tablets, Site Interfaces .etc

  • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    We moved fast and broke things.

    Nobody came back later and fixed things. We were too busy breaking other things.

  • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    “agile development”, “AI generated code”, “early release”, “corporate greed”.

  • Hotzilla@sopuli.xyz
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    13 hours ago

    There is the aspect not many are talking here.

    When previously people released software, there was no easy way to release patch. This means that the first release is the release most of people are going to use forever.

    Nowadays you can very easily patch after release, which means that you can be quick to release, and fix later. This means that you can never install anything .0 version, because they are buggy as hell.

  • IngeniousRocks (They/She) @lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 hours ago

    Node and react. Giant frameworks that seem to be the standard nowadays. They’re huge, bloated, and largely overkill for most things. I personally suspect they will be losing popularity soon due to the memory shortages.

  • BeardededSquidward@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    22 hours ago

    You can blame the USA government for setting standards for light bulbs that planned obsolescence became a thing. They recommended to make light bulbs with filament that burns after a certain time of use to prompt more purchases of light bulbs. And that’s where everyone else got the brilliant idea to make things not last as long. As well people didn’t have the funds to buy new appliances all the time, they were still a relative luxury so if you made something that broke in a year and cost $300 back then you might have a mob with shotguns at your door.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    I say it every day: “Nothing works any more.”

    You pay for an item, and you get the absolutely least quality they can get away with. Customer service is disappearing quickly. Now it’s like “Here’s your thing, you got your thing, why are you still here, go away.”

    Like my son says: “America is getting dumber and meaner.”

    • flamiera@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      18 hours ago

      Customer service has been relegated to AI chat prompts, HUBs and automated servicing that don’t cover all of the problems you may have.

      It’s just extra steps of extra steps.

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    There was a schism where all of a sudden profit became more important than quality. That’s when capitalism started showing it’s purely destructive roots. We rode that train for a while though but now it’s time to get back to being the best we can be, not fucking our brothers and sister up for a token that represents some sort of vague value.

  • taygaloocat@leminal.space
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    1 day ago

    It’s crazy to me these days how much work I have to do to do such simple things on Windows now. I wanted to auto-hide the task bar the other day and instead of just right clicking on the taskbar like I used to I have to crawl through pages of poorly organized settings in the new ugly fucking block format.

    I just buy old shit now. Old TVs, old stereos, old fridges. Anything that doesn’t need modern features doesn’t need to be modern.

  • chunes@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    to all the people saying it never worked: there was a period from about 2006-2016 when it worked a helluva lot better than before or after.

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Thats what I keep saying about Windows 10.

      When it dropped it was fucking amazing. Every last thing just worked and they werent trying to milk us for every last cent or scrap of personal info just yet.

      • birdcannon@lemmy.world
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        Windows 10 was absolutely not a miracle on launch, it had its own host of problems that got fixed or ‘features’ removed over time. I distinctly remember the indexing and search being completely worthless for the first year. Forums were filled with posters declaring they’d hold onto Windows 7 until their PC crumbled to dust, and then they would finally switch to Linux. Such is the cycle of Windows releases.

        • TheOakTree@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          I also remember Windows 10 being annoying at first, but I think it mostly gets overshadowed by how many issues I had with 8/8.1

      • some_kind_of_guy@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I remember the Windows 7 launch more vividly. IIRC they released a free public beta before launch. I immediately downloaded and installed it. Light as a feather and it ran like a top, everything worked.

      • SaraTonin@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You did still have to install a third-party app to get the start menu not to take up the whole screen, though

  • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    remember when shit not working was abnormal and would tank a product so they’d test shit and ensure it had basic functionality?

    pre-software days… they were a thing

  • Hawanja@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I would like google to work like it used to. Youtube search is freaking useless nowadays also.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      *doesn’t make enough money.

      Things that mostly work with occasional minor problems that are easily diagnosed and fixed are still profitable… they just don’t maximise profitability.

      • Typhoon@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        That’s the problem. Capitalism isn’t happy with making a decent profit. It needs to maximize the profit by cutting everything else.

    • X@piefed.world
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      2 days ago

      An answer so simple that you’d think it’d be more obvious, but there it is.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    As far as I know those days have never arrived.

    In the 1980’s you’d buy a computer and the diskette drive would eat disks, the tape drive would fail to load because the volume was turned up too loud, or the software was just badly written by an amateur and it would kill multiple people with high doses of radiation..

    In the 1990’s the gaming computer as we know it today took shape, but you just go ahead and put one together. Install a graphics accelerator card or a sound card in Windows 3.1 or DOS. Go ahead. Windows 98, featuring USB Plug And Play! It just works!

    It’s the year 2000! nothing bad will happen! Windows XP is so much better with so many new features, granted about half of your old Win9x software isn’t going to work because this is basically NT Home Edition. It’s the 21st century, computers are always online and have basically no built-in security. What could go wrong?

    It’s 2010, and it seems these smart phones are here to stay. No problem, we’ll just rebuild the entire internet for tiny, vertical displays and release an entire generation of Windows as a touch-first UI. Nothing’s gonna go wrong.

    It’s 2020, so put your mask on! Between a containership jackknifing across the Suez canal, traffic jams at ports because covid, impending political bullshit, and the rising trend of using AI to “write” software and said AI’s insatiable thirst for hardware meaning entire brands of computer parts are shutting down, maybe you should just go to the store, buy a stick of sidewalk chalk for $17 and just play a goddamn game of hopscotch instead.

    • gramie@lemmy.ca
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      I also remember the 1980s. A computer with 64k of memory cost $300, about $1,000 in today’s money. In 1986 my company bought a 10 MB hard drive. I believe it was around $1,500, or roughly $5,000 today.

      My first modem in 1987 ran at 300 baud, slow enough that I could read incoming text as it arrived.

      When I went to Africa in 1988 as a volunteer, the only way to communicate with my family was by mail, and a letter typically took one month each way. Now that village in Africa has a cell phone tower.

      Moving to Japan in the early 1990s, telephone calls home cost $2.50/minute. I was using email, but almost no one I knew had it.

      Even cars, for all their faults, are tremendously safer, more efficient, more reliable, and longer lasting than they were when I was growing up in the 1960s and '70s.

    • BanMe@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      At the same time tho, our ability to shrink dies, to create displays of millions of pixels flipping perfectly day in, day out for decades - I recycled a Dell LCD monitor at work from 2003 yesterday, still working - to build cars that are more dependable than ever in history with actual moving parts - we take for granted the things that become dependable, even in ways that would have seemed miraculous a generation ago, because we’re always on the bleeding edge of tech where it isn’t working perfectly, because we’re shipping the minimum viable product, and now on a yearly schedule.

      I think we could just chill with having smartphone wars for a few years, since there’s not a huge need to upgrade often, and people can’t afford to eat right now, but they’re releasing more and more foldable phones, making them standard as folks adopt. People will complain about how the hinges don’t work, how they fail a lot more. But that won’t stop them from buying them, from kids demanding them at Christmas, etc. And you know what? Aware of all this, and being chronically broke myself, I have still been subconsciously noting the intro prices for next year’s folding phones because part of me wants the cool little toy first.