DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » I bet it will lead to a spike in mental illness in this generation. It seems like everyone under the age of 25 lives every detail of their life through a phone screen. It's not healthy.
fryup wrote: » yep, not to mention online bullying...back in day if you were picked on in school at least come the end of the school day that would be the end of it....but nowadays its there 24/7 for the whole world to see, i reckon there's a lot of kids out there under severe distress
Billy86 wrote: That was still going on on into the early 2000s or whenever they deregulated the taxis - with the icing on the cake of seeing well over a dozen taxis with their lights on pass you by and not pay any notice.
Billy86 wrote: Nowadays it's sometimes hard to stand at the traffic lights/bus stop/etc in Dublin without having a taxi driver flash their lights at you.
FanadMan wrote: » Billy86 wrote: No doubt that was in Dublin or some other city. Out here in the sticks, you walked. And 10 miles wasn't far when you had a gang with you. Try it in kitten heeled winkle pinkers. I did and shortly thereafter invested in a pair of DMs
Billy86 wrote: No doubt that was in Dublin or some other city. Out here in the sticks, you walked. And 10 miles wasn't far when you had a gang with you.
FanadMan wrote: » No doubt that was in Dublin or some other city. Out here in the sticks, you walked. And 10 miles wasn't far when you had a gang with you.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » What was it like in the 1980's in Ireland? I have seen pictures, video and my god it looked like a depressing place. :eek:Grey, delapidated, hopeless. What was it like? How did you get by without internets, wheelie bins, toilets...? Would you go back if you could?? *Might as well throw in the 70's too for people of that vintage.
Raheem Euro wrote: » Straw Dogs (1971) with its controversial rape scene. Director Sam Peckinpah was accused of glamorising and eroticising rape.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » That wouldn't have been seen in Ireland in the 70s or 80s, it was banned.
Bobtheman wrote: » I moved back to Ireland as a child in the 1980s. Seemed pretty backwards. All white Catholics. Big fuss made over contraception and divorce. Chronically high unemployment I'm glad though we had no Facebook or any of that social media ****e. We didn't all dash to gyms like rats either Plus no harm we didn't have wall to wall pornography but would have been nice if young ones put out a bit more!! Wish we had a thatcher. Our politicians were even worse back then.
fryup wrote: » ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ was that actual dialog from the movie??? :eek:
Raheem Euro wrote: » I watched it on the tv when I was a kid (80s Dublin) That was reasonably mild. The ultra violent banned stuff was around on pirate video tapes and could be seen, if you were that way inclined.
NewbridgeIR wrote: » It wasn't shown on UK TV until 2003. Did RTE show it in the '80s? Have a vague recollection they might have.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » No chance. It was still officially banned here in the mid 90s when I saw it in the IFI.
NewbridgeIR wrote: » Makes sense - must have imagined it. Actually it's probably other people in school renting the same tape from that video shop and discussing it. The banning is mentioned in Ciaran Carty's Censorship book and also got called out at the debate he put on late 1990s - in the IFI.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Had a Sinclair Spectrum 16K with rubber keyboard, it was a bit too much for my parents to afford for Xmas so I agreed to go halves with my confirmation money... later got the 32K Ram Pack and it was great finally being able to play all of those 48K games you heard about and could see in Tomorrow's World in the Ilac but couldn't buy. (Actually I did buy a 48K tape, Atic Atac, a while before my birthday when I got the ram pack.. loaded it in just to see the loading screen but it wouldn't play obviously!) Bought a few games but got loads through tape swapping in the schoolyard... shhh... liked the Ultimate games the best. Pssst, Jet Pac, Tranz Am, Cookie, Atic Atac, Knight Lore, Alien 8 (thought it was great completing that with a map photocopied out of Sinclair User). Ocean games were good too, Match Day (by Jon Ritman, who went on to write the excellent Head Over Heels which I had on the 128K and Amiga and I have a Linux port now!), Cobra, Daley Thompson's Decathlon and Super Test. Other good ones were more or less "one hit wonders" like 3D Tank Attack, or Ant Attack. Sold the Speccy a couple of years later and got a Sinclair QL (!) which would have been decent if the Microdrives weren't so unreliable and blank cartridges so expensive, because of that there were practically no games or much else for it, learned a lot about programming on it though. (Linus Torvalds was another QL owner... whatever happened to him?) Even before Sinclair had their financial crash it became impossible to get blank Microdrive cartridges, and the ones I had would stretch and eventually become unusable so it had to go. Got a Spectrum 128K then - the short-lived "proper" Sinclair one before Amstrad took over. Felt like a step back in time (and wish I'd kept my old tapes!) but it had a good sound chip which some games took advantage of, and by this time a lot of the old good Spectrum software was available for half nothing on budget software labels. Another couple of years after that I got an Amiga 500.. different world altogether. Wish I'd got the dial up modem for it but I never did. But I won't talk about the games because the 80s had only days left to go when I got it BTW everything including the first year or so of my Amiga ownership (4096 colours) was viewed on a sh!tty B&W portable and the only reason I got that was that my dad got annoyed with me taking over the TV (THE tv, the only one) from school home time until dinner time!
mikemac2 wrote: » Commodore 64 You loaded your game and it could take 10 minutes or more. If there were multiple games on the cassette you rewound to the start and reset the counter and fast forwarded to the correct location Games cost 3 to 4 punts so quite cheap. A cartridge which could load instantly cost maybe 15 punts. An Amiga which was a step up used floppy disks but I didn't have that so it was cassettes and loading times for me There were some great games. I was particular fans of the Dizzy series. Think of an egg with a face and arms and legs and you took him on platform adventures However the best game of all was Flimbos Quest. The music is still so catchy! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiCxXMquPKs