Serren: Experimenting with an electronic project kit.
Using a sonic television remote.
Using a corded television remote.
Watching television programmes with no commercial interruptions.
Watching Saturday morning cartoons.
Using a rotary telephone.
Using a corded telephone.
Phreaking.
Using a cassette drive.
Using an acoustic coupler modem.
Using anti-glare monitor filters.
Drilling stacks of 3.5" double density disks to make them high density.
Configuring motherboards and adapters with jumpers, rockers and DIP switches.
Calling BBSes.
Playing door games.
Attending user meets.
Attending computer shows.
Typing in games from magazines.
Coding in Pascal.
Coding in assembly.
Having steel computer cases and keyboards.
Using operating systems that aren't Windows NT, Mac OS X or Linux based.
Watching a cartridge in a Fisher Price Movie Viewer.
Reading along in a book or partwork with a record or cassette. (ie. Story Teller, Ladybird Books or Read-Along Adventures)
Reading a Choose Your Own Adventure book.
Playing board games.
Playing with sparking friction toy guns.
Playing Lazer Tag.
Programming routes into a Big Trak.
Going to a roller rink.
Breakdancing.
Wearing New York fat laces.
Wearing sweatbands.
Arriving for a flight twenty minutes before take-off.
TheMonkofDestiny: Kickstarter alone is keeping a significant portion of that reality alive.
Breja: Yeah, though I feel like kickstarter board games became a whole separate reality. You know, huge boxes, tons of elaborate miniatures etc. for people who I guess really love complexity and overblown production values.
Personaly, while I get how cool that stuff looks, I prefer games like Smallworld or Lords of Waterdeep, something not as elaborate but still with lots of depth to the gameplay. Not to mention more affordable and actually possible to play with a small circle of friends who don't have 6+ hours for it.
I am still waiting for my battle of five armies collector edition! Love the war of the ring setup. Lords of water deep is on the wish list, just never get time.