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22 votes
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French games used to be weird
9 votes -
Quake renaissance: A short history of twenty-five years of Quake modding
6 votes -
The inside story of how the lowly PDF played the longest game in tech
15 votes -
Life before Unicode
13 votes -
What if the Morgenthau plan was implemented in Germany after the end of WW2?
5 votes -
Quake renaissance: Where is Quake now, and how did it get here?
5 votes -
1Password 8: The story so far
10 votes -
1800s astronomical drawings vs. NASA images
13 votes -
Victoria II, Part I: Mechanics and Gears
10 votes -
Swedish ice hockey star Peter Karlsson was stabbed to death in the street in 1995. His killer said he was protecting himself via the so-called 'gay panic' defence
6 votes -
Remember when multiplayer gaming needed envelopes and stamps? The history of play by mail games
9 votes -
Doc Gooden's career was over. Then he did the impossible.
2 votes -
Here Comes the Groom: A (Conservative) Case for Gay Marriage (1989)
8 votes -
When the Western world ran on guano
9 votes -
History of the Segway - Dean Kamen's literary agent revisits the story twenty years later to reflect on his contribution to the invention's hype and failure
3 votes -
Why Hitler was obsessed with Iceland
5 votes -
Today is the World Wide Web's 30th birthday - On 6 Aug 1991, Tim Berners-Lee published the first page, and changed the world
11 votes -
The great myth of the medieval tritone ban
7 votes -
Why medieval city-builder video games are historically inaccurate
20 votes -
The future of airliners? The plane that may change air travel forever (Boeing X-48)
8 votes -
How did you find niche stuff before the Internet?
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear...
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear others’ memories about this.
Edit: Somewhat related, I saw this post today: The most unbelievable things about life before smartphones
21 votes -
High court victory for Stonehenge campaigners as tunnel is ruled unlawful
10 votes -
A Computer-Generated Ballet (1965) - The first computer-generated animation of human figures in motion
5 votes -
History of game jams
4 votes -
Pirate guacamole and bumbo
4 votes -
When an NBA player's shoe falls off, chaos reigns
7 votes -
Do you know any books, articles, videos, etc. about how relationships (friendships, dating, etc) worked in the past? If so, then why do they rarely appear when people talk about them?
Occasionally people here get into discussions about social relationships, namely dating, and what quickly comes up is how both of those seem to be less common and harder to 'get'. This more...
Occasionally people here get into discussions about social relationships, namely dating, and what quickly comes up is how both of those seem to be less common and harder to 'get'. This more frequently happens in overtly dating and relationship subreddits and similar dedicated spaces, albeit, of course, this also pops up in more general communities, alongside any community where social relationships are an important topic, like communities about social ideologies like feminism or the manosphere or about genders because heterosexuality.
One thing I often find is missing is some historical context. A lot of talk about loneliness and lack of platonic or romantic relationships is basically limited to the recent past, if it even talks about the past at all. It seems like it would be helpful to look at what relationships and dating were like 10, 20, 30 years ago when it comes to talking about the problems or just general state of both today. So do you know of good sources of information concerning relationships in the past? If so, then why do you think they don't pop up in discussions about dating?
14 votes -
The hook: Scene transitions in classical cinema
5 votes -
The ‘Men’s Liberation’ movement time forgot: Nowadays, the Men’s Rights movement runs the gamut from incels to red pillers, but in the 1970s, men's libbers looked something like… feminists?
11 votes -
How do you solve a problem like Woody Allen's ‘Manhattan’?
5 votes -
Frederick the Great: Gay king of Europe (and of the attempts at denying this)
5 votes -
A brief history of grindhouse/exploitation film: From the birth of cinema to Tarantino
5 votes -
Ise Jingu and the Pyramid of Enabling Technologies
2 votes -
After Pop, We Dematerialize: Oscar Masotta, Happenings and Media Art At the Beginnings of Conceptualism by Ana Longoni and Mariano Mestman
2 votes -
The internet feeds on its own dying dreams
4 votes -
We've been telling the Alamo story wrong for nearly 200 years. Now it's time to correct the record
20 votes -
Battle of Savo Island 1942: America's worst naval defeat
3 votes -
Shooting Captured Insurgents (1898) A silent film review
5 votes -
Vicious doctors and cruel diseases in 18th-Century Jamaica
3 votes -
King of the Hill, again | Men of the Hill
12 votes -
Avenging Varus and the loss at Teutoburg Forest - Battle of the Long Bridges (15 AD)
6 votes -
Adobo: Filipino or Spanish?
2 votes -
Computer Graphics Special (1986 High Quality 60FPS Laserdisc CG Demo Reel)
12 votes -
The biggest cheating scandal in TrackMania history
14 votes -
What is Asian American music, really? Seeking more than representation, a critic tries to make sense of a fragmented, disparate musical tradition
6 votes -
America has a drinking problem
16 votes -
WW2 animated: Western Front, 1944-1945. Part 1
3 votes -
Super Mario Bros speedrunning: The human limit
14 votes -
The doomed mouse utopia that inspired the ‘Rats of NIMH’. Dr. John Bumpass Calhoun spent the ’60s and ’70s playing god to thousands of rodents.
10 votes