I have way too many photos (9.9k), mostly memes, mostly which I will never see again. I have way too many musical artists in my library. For a long time I added practically every song I heard (and more albums from the same artists). All of this is on Apple. Is it worth going through and purging it (especially when the internet’s dying anyway and who knows what infrastructure we’ll have in five years or more)? Any advice for de-appleing for someone whose hyperfixations do not include computer nerd stuff?
Yea, i regularly curate my stuff.
our possessions tie us to our past, and it’s to our benefit to choose those ties carefully. how does having those big troves of things you will never look at again make you feel?
Reading the blogs linked in OP shows how annoyingly fast trends are changing or the “vibe is shifting”, I know I’m concentrating on all the wrong parts but is it really necessary to change trends every 5 years at this point? Especially when it comes with drastic body changes and it really affects femmes (and mascs and etc. as well to a lesser extent) I have a friend that got a BBL done to have this huge butt but apparently she’s upset that she caught on to the trend “too late” and now “Ozempic skinny” is what’s cool. How frustrating.
i mean most trends arent that drastic, its good that things change over time it would be boring otherwise, natural trend changes are cool imo. unnatural trends driven by corporate greed suck tho and i try to disengage from them as much as possible im looking at u square vs rounded edges.
Doesn’t that surgery have a nasty recovery time? I can’t fathom doing it because of a trend.
I couldn’t read the entire piece, it felt like a rambling thought line that didn’t get edited or streamlined.
Regardless, I can relate to the sentiment, but I disagree about the reasons. A lot of what made the early internet fun and engaging is lost, but not because of being bored of the trend but because the experience was slightly changed to be a bit worse in favor of profits a million of times. Back when it was all blogs, forums and random websites, individuals would write and share ideas, have conversations and whether that could be a way to make money was not the point. Now we live and die by the whims of the algorithm, 90% of internet traffic is 5 websites and people don’t really own the content they make for money rather than fun.
That was a very interesting substack.
I think, if that is true - then what does it matter? I might as well just use shit until it’s officially “gone” or whatever. I do agree it’s on the way out, btw. At least the form we have now. I’m not sure how the world is going to proceed from that.
I’m not sure if you’re serious about the internet dying, it is basic infrastructure that improves efficiency for everyone from governments and corporations to individuals, it is not limited to being a source of information and entertainment, or a platform to express your opinion.
Calling it an infrastructure might not be accurate, the internet at its core is a global network of interconnected machines, the widespread connectivity is what makes it the internet, such a concept will still exist even if hardware advances.
Regarding purging online stuff, some people might find sentimental value in reviewing what they used to watch/listen to many years later. If you have issues with storage space, just store a text list of music you’ve heard, links to videos/articles you’ve watched/read, names of movies/shows/books/games you’ve watched/read/played, and add a date for additional context for future you. As for images, do not delete any of your personal photos but also keep them safe, memes can be deleted because popular ones are readily available and the rest don’t matter. Non-personal photos mostly don’t matter unless you have some use for them.
Digital “hoarding”, for lack of a better term, is not a new problem, but is much easier to achieve than physical hoarding due to cheaper storage in terms of physical space. People used to and still do collect physical tapes/disks/newspapers/posters/books.
About the infrastructure, I mean the internet is heavily subsidized and unprofitable for most of the people involved. With climate change and economic crises etc things are becoming more unstable and I wouldn’t be surprised if the internet is harmed.
I already have a few lists. I just think photos and music would take a long time to go through especially if I switch to a different platform.
I would purge any self identifying information but otherwise it doesn’t really matter.
I came across a trove of my old web scrapings from over a decade ago and had a great time going throught it all. Learned some things about myself, where I’d been and where I am now and seeing the growth vector. It feels a bit like book burning to me to destroy such an archive. What would it cost you to find some storage and just put it on there and into the attic? Even if you never see it again, maybe your loved ones will. I’d be proud for anyone to see what I’ve saved from the past few years.
I don’t want to get rid of my personal photos, and sometimes even the memes, but most of it’s just random images I downloaded for discord or whatever which I don’t have time to go through ever. As for music, I barely make a dent with my daily listening. Fortunately I got over my phase of listening to way too much music because I was scared I’d miss out with how much there is and how short life is. Now I don’t feel like listening to music most of the time. That’s probably transient too.