/retro/ - Y2K

1990s and 2000s Nostalgia


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Wanna watch some /retro/ TV? Check out https://www.my00stv.com/

RULES

BUNKER


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Alright, this is meant to be a successor to /y2k/ on the old 8chan, however I have expanded it to include both the 1990's and the 2000's and NSFW content is allowed, provided it's actually related to the purpose of this board and doesn't violate any of the site's core rules.
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>>5169
Same to you.

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Let's have a new thread without a tonne of broken images.  Have there been any new forms of /retro/ media (could be movies, games, anime, websites, etc.) that wanted to look old and actually succeeded?

There's an artist called BlueTheBone who makes "retro"-styled animations, cheesecake, and porn.  Like any modern hack, he overdoses on visual clutter and uses filters that don't actually resemble the time period he's trying to emulate - but despite that, I think his style is consistently decent.  If he relied less on computers and filters, then I think he'd be a much better artist, but that goes without saying for most contemporary artists.

The really weird things happen when he tries to make modern character designs and media look old, like pic 2.  It isn't exactly wrong, but there is something perplexing about viewing characters and series that were developed specifically with modern aesthetics in mind.
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>>5173
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4Ge4KQjv4Q

Would you say Planetronika counts?

>>5171
Ten minutes of Anna. That was pretty good, and I'm glad the cast is being introduced.
Replies: >>5271
>>5076
>TESTMACARONI
Speaking of this guy, he made a new short about shrek in 1930's style.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aor2ja9Aqmc
>>5185
It counts. It even got a new pilot episode one day ago.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4niV7OYZXYE
Snaptic went from shitposting with a frutiger aero man to a year-long hiatus, only to return with a trailer for a game he's making.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2K2Dksi40s

It must have struck gold with one of the algorithm gods because it got 400k views and his patreon now has 10,000 subscribers; plenty are free, I'm sure, but the minimum paid tier is $5 so I'm sure he's making good money from it. And good for him.
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Nicholas Fedorov has been a lolcow for as long as I've known about him, but I've liked this song ever since I first came across it. It's a shame what happened to him.

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The world has seen many empires rise and fall, and among them is one I find personally fascinating but little discussed: the American corporate empire of the late 20th century. While other empires conquered the world with guns and soldiers, corporations harnessed spirits of computer machinery to fight wars in cyberspace with Christmas catalogues as their propaganda posters. The bones of this empire have persisted into the current day as world-grasping monsters or corpses picked over by scavengers, but I wish to focus upon brighter, fuller days.

To a lot of people who grew up during this era or after it, "empire" probably doesn't feel like the right word. It just seemed natural for America to be leading the world economy and producing the best computers, movies, and bikini models. Partially I was just young and optimistic, but in hindsight that era definitely had the guts to fill the three-piece, eight-hundred-dollar, one-hundred-per-cent-cashmere suit it wore to the office.

And the office! Look at it!

The office was a place with its own culture, its own manners of dress and address. You were expected to look and act a certain way, to be formal but not too detached. Business casual suits and pencil skirts just make people look good, even the rank and file. There were phrases and customs that needed to be respected. For many people, the office was a second home - sometimes literally, depending on deadlines. It was a beautiful mixture of ruthless work and human friendsh
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>>5202 (OP) 
I think I get it, but calling it officepunk is certainly wrong. Punks are essentially angry street urchin with their own subculture(s), so calling everything whateverpunk is just wrong, especially because a corpo environment is the exact opposite of a bunch of angry street urchin who are so low in the hierarchy that they are trying to move outside of society instead of upward. Calling it XXth century office aesthetics or something along those lines might be clumsy, but also more accurate.
Replies: >>5206
>>5205
>calling it officepunk is certainly wrong
In the vaporwave (music genre) sphere people call this "officesoft", which is a combination of "Office" and "(micro)Soft". I think I prefer that term.
>angry street urchin
LMAO!
Replies: >>5210
>>5206
Officesoft is a better term for it, no doubt. I will have to go searching for artists who make it.

I have been meaning to get productive with Blender so perhaps this will help inspire me. (Probably not. I am terribly lazy.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starfire_(film)
>Starfire was a Sun Microsystems promotional video filmed in 1994, demonstrating Bruce Tognazzini's ideas for a 21st-century computer user interface. Inspired in part by Apple Computer's Knowledge Navigator film from 1987, Tognazzini and his team at SunSoft sought to create a more realistic look at how computer technology and interfaces would improve. The project drew together the talents of more than 100 engineers, designers, futurists, and filmmakers in an effort to both predict and guide the future of computing. 
>The film is set in the year 2004 and features a protagonist interacting by voice, mouse, and stylus with a 5-foot-wide computer screen (1.5 m) . The story concerns an executive at an auto-maker who must make a compelling presentation for her design. 
And you can find it in youtube:
https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=w9OKcKisUrY
Quite goofy from this day and age, but it's definitely very 90s.
Replies: >>5274
>>5272
The future of the past is also a different country from the one in which we live.

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So, what are some of your favorite memories of the old internet?


Can be websites, memes, events or any other aspect of the days of Web 1.0 and 1.5


For a quick reference, here's what I would define as Web 1.0 and Web 1.5


>Web 1.0: Usenet, Geocities and Angelfire, AOL (1991-2001)
>Web 1.5: Early YouTube, ED, 4chan in its "wild west" days, MySpace, YTMND, Newgrounds and the peak years of dA and Fanfiction.net (2001-2008)


You also had cross-generation stuff like GameFAQs and IMDB which are still around today, although sadly IMDB's infamous message boards are gone
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>>5236
I've already posted some in this thread a long time ago, but one that I don't see here is https://spacehey.com/

it's a myspace lookalike sort of thing. I haven't really used it but it seems neat. I'm going to make an account and keep it to only some IRL friends (otherwise I would share my account here once I do).
Replies: >>5238 >>5239
>>5237
Sounds interesting, thanks Anon. Please continue participating with us all here, btw. Cheers.
Replies: >>5240
>>5237
I was pretty late to the MySpace train, but social media went downhill once Facebook came along. I guess Twitter has its uses, but still.
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>>5238
My problem with slow boards is always that I forget to check in after I see no new posts for a while, then I realize it's been months (sometimes years) before I remember to check back again.

I'll drop some of my bookmarks some of you guys may like.

http://www.naturephotographers.net/imagecritique/ic.cgi?a=va&ns=1
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I just found this waifufag shrine to Dana Scully from the time of the original run of The X-Files that's still up:
https://obsse.us/index.shtml

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Latest version of Signal running on Windows 7 with Second System (https://www.patreon.com/posts/second-system-2-138036875) software installed. 

I still use Windows 7 as my main OS and probably will be able to continue doing so for at least a couple more years using the Second System software (as well as VxKex and windows 7-specific forks of some programs). 

Ask any questions you may have, and feel free to post anything relevant. 

I know windows 7 is not very retro but I thought it would be of interest here. Thread is of course open to other older OSes like XP, 98, DOS, old Linux or UNIX, etc.
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>>5264
>an OS that simply doesn't have (or has it completely disabled) networking at all
TempleOS
Replies: >>5266
>>5265
Heh, fair enough. I was thinking one suited for use with a robowaifu that enabled all kinds of modern electronics. Maybe my mindset is wrong that TempleOS couldn't handle this? Good idea though, Anon.
Replies: >>5267
>>5266
>that otherwise enabled*
>>5264
>I'm interested in having an OS that simply doesn't have networking at all.
Back in the day you would install Windows and just... not install the wifi driver from the CD-ROM. :^)
On a more serious note, you could make a custom Windows ISO with as many disabled or outright removed features as you want using tools like NTLite (Windows 7, 8, 10) or nLite (Windows 2000, XP) or even 98lite (Windows 98). I've used the last two extensively years ago although I never disabled something as crucial as networking. 
There's also Linux and the BSDs which, being open source, should give you the freedumbs to remove/disable any part of the OS that you do not want.
Replies: >>5269
>>5268
Thanks! Hmm, sounds interesting. I was already leaning towards OpenBSD, so I'll probably investigate that approach.

Any specifics detail advice would be appreciated here.

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Aesthetics thread
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>>1186
> I did however find the CD-ROM that came with the book and found some cool hi-res wallpapers inside!
I know it's been five years, but judging by the filenames of your images there are quite a few of those wallpapers. Do you have the rest of them, or a source for the CD with the images?
Replies: >>5254
>>5253
see
>>2071
Replies: >>5260
>>5254
Oh, thank you!
>>5252
>CZUR book scanner
That looks perfect, but also probably too expensive for one book. If you have a smartphone maybe you can find a dedicated scanner application for it? That should do the job acceptably with little to no payment required.
Replies: >>5262
>>5261
i actually got another retro-esque book that anons here would enjoy, it's a collection of logos called Los Logos, they're a company that's been publishing logos from different companies since the early 2000s. i have the first edition and from what i've skimmed through it it'd very relevant to the board. if i get enough saved up i'll probably set aside some time to get them scanned and uploaded.

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RIDERS ON THE STORM
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i made a post a long time ago saying how i tought 90s/00s cars were ugly and weird >>3443
i'd like to personally apologize since they've really grown on me since then and i like them way more than the boats from the 60s and 70s that boomers jizz themselves over and the new giant fibreglass behemoths that various shades of browns obsess over.
i think my dream car would be a bright red C5 gen corvette, specifically the 99 or 2000 model. i've always liked how they look and since most boomers have a disdain for anything that came after ronald reagan they're fairly cheap on the used market. there's a local guy selling his for $14k and it's in pristine condition and low mileage. unfortunately none of my cars last more than two years on average and i'd probably kill myself if i totaled a 'vette. maybe when i have fuck-you money i'll get one but for now i'll just stare at them.
Replies: >>5256 >>5258
>>5255
Nice choice. She's a beaut.
>>145 (OP) 
80s cars (and their earlier prototypes) welcome too?
Replies: >>5258
>>5255
> i like them way more than the boats from the 60s and 70s that boomers jizz themselves over
I'm not a car guy, but I think I might agree with you there. I don't think they look bad or anything, but '60s and '70s muscle cars and the like have never done much for me.
>most boomers have a disdain for anything that came after ronald reagan
For me it's more like George H.W. Bush or Bill Clinton.
>>5257
I don't think so, but check out the '80s nostalgia thread. There's been a bit of carposting in there.
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Tiburons were a steaming pile, hated these things.

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Post cool /retro/ ads and TV commercials
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Nokia used to run ads with some serious cuties on them. Wish I could find those wallpapers again, stupidly didn't name them.
>>2612
If you dig around, you can find the full video. There's other women in it and it's all topless nudity. It feels slightly pornographic (even though nothing explicit happens) but the real intention apparently was art. I got curious because I miss 00s "amateur" porn. That stuff today is just kinda gross imo.
Replies: >>5160
>>5149
You should share the link with the class, you teaser!
https://archive.org/details/howtohavecybersexontheinternet1996
Replies: >>5215
>>5160

Imma do it (wish me luck)
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IT'S MOON CHILD
OH OH OH
YOU HAVE THE POWER
TO BE HIS FRIEND

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Alright, I decided to expand the scope of this board a little more and include a containment thread for 80's nostalgia.

I mainly created this board to serve as both a successor to the old /y2k/ board, which was my favorite board on 8chan, and also expand the scope to include 90's nostalgia too, but after checking on this board, I noticed someone mentioning 80's nostalgia and I decided I would do something about it.

I personally don't care that much for 80's pop culture aside from the music and some of the old edgy anime, but 80's nostalgia did become a thing in the 2000's and I can see why others like the whole 80's style, so I'll allow it as long as it's mainly kept to this thread.
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>>4412
Vietnamese nail salon art?
Replies: >>4812
>>4809
It looks kinda fancy or glammed up (even if dated) - I can see how the ladies dug that stuff. I kinda enjoyed the haircut experience for the same reason - never had enough coverage for pompadours and such but big crazy hair always sounded cool to me.
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Some Atari 2600 game ads.
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>>5218
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Suzanne Ciani talking about synthesizers.

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>ITT: Vidya of the 90's and 2000's


Keep it limited to the scope of this board, so basically Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Generation consoles only for now. 


For those who don't know what consoles are part of which generation, here's a quick rundown of the time frame we're talking about...


>Fourth Generation: SNES, Sega Genesis/Sega CD
>Fifth Generation: PS1, N64, Sega Saturn
>Sixth Generation: Dreamcast, PS2, Gamecube, OG Xbox


Discussion of games from the Seventh Generation consoles (PS3/Wii/Xbox 360) is allowed as well, but I'd like the thread to mainly focus on the 4th-6th console genererations since the 7th Gen era carried over into the 2010's and a lot of the games from that era onward obviously have far more in common with modern gaming than stuff from the 16-bit consoles or the PS1 and PS2 eras.
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Greg was a real pro.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xj2drENV9uk
Replies: >>5227 >>5228
>>5226
*Craig
>>5226
Nintendo Power wasnt enough like RAW magazine
>>3827
Its so mature for its age. 
and somewhat more paletable than 
other cyberpunk games-not just point n click
>>5134
I just read this article and I really enjoyed it. Thank you so much for compiling all this info and making it easily available so what remains of Pure Dragon does not become lost media. I was so sad to learn about that animated pilot which had not been archived.

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