Vyralize: Thinking back, the CD player and Sony Walkman felt like things I used just the other day, but in reality those products that are at least 15 years old depending on when you’re counting from. It’s crazy to see how much has changed since then. Here are a few places, jobs, and items that are soon to become a thing of the past. Better save them. Might be worth a fortune 50 years from now.
The OnePlus Watch 2 is touted for having incredible battery life for a Wear OS watch, and that saved me when I forgot the charger on a trip.
Vision Pro is here and it’s a surprisingly capable device. Apple has also loaded the headset with a ton of options and features that aren’t obvious at first glance.
Ringing the changes: All the news, rumors, and tips you missed last week.
Enjoy the illegality of weed? I don't think that one belongs on this list lol.
I will actually be sad for 3 of these things.
1. Novels...it'll be weird when almost all paperbacks will become E..backs.
2. Cursive. It's weird that you don't see alot of people writing that way anymore.
3. Maldives. I actually knew about this a while ago and am trying to save up money before it actually goes away completely.
most things probably wont be worth a fortune,but if you have a ton of older items some might be in high demand and if its in good working condition
people keep saying that CDs, DVDs and the like will be gone soon.
in the time of MP3s, yet you can still get vinyl, hell, in Japan you can still get music on tape.
http://kotaku.com/why-music...
DVDs are still selling despite the HD on demand services being readily available.
books still sell despite the rise of E Readers.
the reason MP3s are as big as they are is because they're so small, you can have thousands of songs on something the size of a cigarette packet.
with videos and games, the file sizes are getting huge, an average song would be a few megabtytes, an HD movie can be gigabytes.
these "death of physical media" articles are a bit premature.