I’m curious about what’s going to happen with Gen Alpha.
Any other moms and dads here exposing their kids to retrotech?
I have two little ones that I’ve made a DOSBox installation for (Mixed-Up Mother Goose and Donald Duck’s Playground are their favourites).
I do wonder how they’re going to think about old tech when they’re older.
I haven’t told them that it’s “old” or “retro” yet, so they just think they’re normal fun games.
Yeah my kids get to play 90’s CD-ROM infotainment games. World of Richard Scarry and such. Basic math, phonics and spelling haven’t changed since then and these games are guaranteed to not have any in-app purchases or ads! First it was on a PowerBook G3 that is going bad so it’s been swapped out for an iMac G4.
I have two little ones that I’ve made a DOSBox installation for (Mixed-Up Mother Goose and Donald Duck’s Playground are their favourites)
And they appreciate it, huh. It makes sense, I guess that’s the digital-age version of a kid playing with the box their toy came in. And man, some of those old games really are timeless. If I had some of my own, and they expressed interest, I’d like to try teaching them from both ends of the stack instead of starting in the middle like I did. It was a bit frustrating knowing how to code, but not how to either make a modern-looking application, or how the code was itself working.
Another Oregan Trail generation here.
I’m curious about what’s going to happen with Gen Alpha. Any other moms and dads here exposing their kids to retrotech? I have two little ones that I’ve made a DOSBox installation for (Mixed-Up Mother Goose and Donald Duck’s Playground are their favourites). I do wonder how they’re going to think about old tech when they’re older. I haven’t told them that it’s “old” or “retro” yet, so they just think they’re normal fun games.
Yeah my kids get to play 90’s CD-ROM infotainment games. World of Richard Scarry and such. Basic math, phonics and spelling haven’t changed since then and these games are guaranteed to not have any in-app purchases or ads! First it was on a PowerBook G3 that is going bad so it’s been swapped out for an iMac G4.
That’s a big plus. I also like that they have to use the keyboard, since the mouse can be a bit tricky when you’re young.
I had no idea there was a Richard Scarry game! They love the books, so maybe I should give it a shot. (Though it does look pretty mouse-heavy)
Same here, 43 years old.
The alphas probably won’t have a lot of computing on the cinder. 🤷🏻♀️
Unless we all get to it & fix climate 💁🏻♀️
@duncesplayed @CanadaPlus
And they appreciate it, huh. It makes sense, I guess that’s the digital-age version of a kid playing with the box their toy came in. And man, some of those old games really are timeless. If I had some of my own, and they expressed interest, I’d like to try teaching them from both ends of the stack instead of starting in the middle like I did. It was a bit frustrating knowing how to code, but not how to either make a modern-looking application, or how the code was itself working.