- I mean virtually all the hardware our culture runs on is less than 100 years old. - And a good chunk of our buildings, as well. - Maybe in America. I live in the UK and my house is 150 years old. I grew up in one that’s nearly 300 years old. 
- So am I! 
 
 
- Wait until he learns about the word smartphone. 
- I’m just glad the term “talkies” didn’t catch on. - You think that’s bad, Lumiere’s father in law wanted him to call the new invention “Domitor” instead of “Cinema”. - Or in alternate reallity: “You think that’s bad, Lumiere wanted to call the new invention “Cinema” before his father in law reasoned with him to call it “Domitor”.” - @srecko “so strange, imagine if we didn’t have Domitoriums!” 
 
- Idk that sounds kinda badass 
- Why? - @Sigmatics a sort of squashed version from the Latin, “dominator”. He thought it would dominate. - They ended up going with the Greek word “kínēma” which means movement, hence movie cameras were “cinematographs” - movement writers. - But they did call their first camera model Domitor. :) 
 
 
- Just wait for when “walkies” really take off with VR movies - I see what you did there, but I would probably not recommend walking around while watching a movie in VR. 
 
 
- It was just kind of a trend in the twenties to add the suffix “ie” to anything when something new was invented - We’re not much better, we’ve had tends for -r and -io. - Movr, movios. - Don’t forget dropping the last vowel! I wonder what they spend their vowel savings on… - Saving them up for a later trend probably. Moviesie. - Moviiiiis? - Is it wrong that I kind of like that one? 
 
 
 
 
- Other examples? 
 
- Imagine if the guy who named movies with sound talkies also named movies… wait … oh no… 
- Everyone still “video tapes” everything on their phones. - Do they…? - I’ll be honest, I haven’t heard anyone say that ever when using a phone. - Maybe “videos” as a verb but generally “records” in my experience - They were joking… - What makes you think that? - deleted by creator 
- Because no one ever said this. - In a thread about a word being ingrained in our culture, where’s the joke in claiming another word is also ingrained in our culture? - I may be wrong, but it seemed pretty sincere to me. 
 
 
 
 
 
- I find things that carry over despite having little to do with the original. Tape for example. We were saying that for a while when digital recorders and cameras on phones could do video. - Same with the disk icon. Still used for save despite most millennials now having no idea what the thing is. - Most millenials grew up with floppy disks. You’re thinking of Gen Z and Gen Alpha - Oh God there’s a new one? - Ah, you must be from gen Z. - Yes new generations will continually be created and older generations will always sneer at them. 
- Lol that is the usual pattern right 
- Gen Alpha are everyone born 2010 and later, so yeah, they’re 13 at the oldest. 
- I don’t know how to tell you this… 
- Here is an alternative Piped link(s): - Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube. - I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub. 
- That was awful 
 
 
 
- I know what it is but no idea how it works. I grew up with cassettes for music and CDs 
 
- You should take longer showers so that you can think a bit more. 
- Bird is the word 
- What is the word movie? - “movie”, the word. - Maybe this one 
 
- It’s a word movie, how do you not know this? /s 
 














