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Owning a computer in the 90s wasn't just about using technology—it was an exercise in patience. Everything took time. You waited for the system to boot up, for software to crawl its way onto the screen, and for the disk drive to make those oddly satisfying grinding noises. Getting online? That was a process. First, the modem had to screech its way to a connection (assuming no one picked up the phone mid-dial), then web pages loaded one pixel at a time, and if you wanted to download a song? Hope you had a few hours to spare. A full movie or game? That was an overnight commitment—provided your dial-up didn't cut out halfway through.
Fast forward to today, and we've got instant access to everything. Streaming, cloud storage, fiber-optic speeds—waiting has become an inconvenience instead of an expectation. But back then, the struggle was part of the charm. It built character… or at least gave us plenty of time to doodle in MS Paint.
These moments from the 90s and early 2000s will take you back to when floppy disks were king, CRT monitors ruled our desks, and technology felt like both a miracle and a test of endurance.