Nostalgia
nostalgia noun nos·tal·gia nä-ˈstal-jə nə-, also nȯ-, nō-; nə-ˈstäl- 1: a wistful or excessively sentimental yearning for return to or of some past period or irrecoverable condition also : something that evokes nostalgia
Rules for Nostalgia Lemmy Community
1. Respectful Nostalgia Share nostalgic content and memories respectfully. Avoid offensive or insensitive references that may be hurtful to others.
2. Relevant Nostalgia Posts should focus on nostalgic content, including memories, media, and cultural references from the past. Stay on topic to preserve the nostalgic theme of the community.
3. Source Verification If you share nostalgic media or content, provide accurate sources or background information when possible.
4. No Spamming Avoid excessive posting of similar nostalgic topics to keep content diverse and engaging for all members.
5. Positive Discussions Encourage positive discussions and interactions related to nostalgic topics. Respect different viewpoints and memories shared by community members.
6. Quality Content Strive to post high-quality content that sparks nostalgia and meaningful conversations among members.
7. Moderation Guidelines
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Respectful Behavior Treat fellow members with kindness and respect. Harassment or disrespectful behavior will not be tolerated.
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Appropriate Content Only Ensure all content aligns with the nostalgic theme and community guidelines. Inappropriate or offensive material will be removed.
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Engagement and Participation Engage actively with posts and discussions. Constructive feedback and contributions enrich the community experience.
By adhering to these rules and guidelines, we can create a welcoming and enjoyable space to relive nostalgic moments together. If you have any questions or suggestions, feel free to reach out to the moderators. Thank you for sharing your nostalgia responsibly!
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It's not that it was difficult to set the clock. It's that you had to do it every time the power blinked, and most people didn't use the timer function to record things very often.
True, but so did the oven and microwave clocks (and clock radios if you didn't keep the 9V backup battery maintained). Clock radios are kind-of a given by their nature, but most of the time the oven and microwave clocks would get reset.
I still frequently use the microwave and oven clocks for their time telling capabilities. I never really did use the vcr for that reason because it was in tiny digits that made it hard to see across the room. I did set the vcr because it annoyed me if it was blinking, but I didn't look to it for the time.
I guess the modern equivalent to not setting the vcr clock is having all the default ring tones and notification noises for all your apps.
That was pretty much what I was thinking of: default ringtone, full volume.
not in our household. every clock was secondary/non-important after the wall clock
No, VCR blinked if you coughed. Those things were far more sensitive.
Plus there were still a lot of analog electric clocks on stoves during the VCR era.
And don't get me started on the microwave.
Screw setting all those clocks whenever the power burps. If you ever lived where this occurs almost daily, you'd understand.
Plus, setting a VCR clock was always a pain in the ass.
It knows what it did!
Some were, some weren't. I remember we had 3 different VCRs, and it was always different.
Oldest one. It had a row of like 30 buttons behind a pull-down panel. You held 'Clock" until the hours started flashing, used the up and down buttons to set the hour. Press clock again to switch to the minutes (same arrow keys to adjust), then one final press of "Clock" to lock it in. Literally the same way my oven clock is set.
Just press "Menu" then "Clock" and type the time in on the remote.
Newest: It was automatic. It picked up the time from the PBS channel and set itself.
Wife and I don’t fix clocks on any appliance in the house, never have, don’t care. Either it picks up time from the daily signal in Colorado or we ignore it but there’s no way we’re setting it every time power blips. We fall in the middle of GenX.
Are power outages that common over there?