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It might not look like much from way over here in the chrome-coated cyber-jungle of 2025, but 1980s tech was absolutely revolutionary. I know, I know — the devices were bulky, the screens were green, and nothing had Wi-Fi — but trust me, it felt like the future had crash-landed right into our living rooms.
The '70s? Basically the Dark Ages. You listened to music on vinyl like your great-grandparents, made phone calls while physically tethered to a wall, and the most high-tech entertainment was, uh… a lava lamp. But then came the 80s, and everything changed.
We got the Walkman. Music on the go! Are you kidding me? That alone made us feel like secret agents. Cordless phones appeared like magic. Early cell phones were the size of bricks, but we didn't care — we could talk from the car! Computers became something normal people could actually own, not just the stuff of science fiction. And video games? Glorious, pixelated magic. Even MTV, with its "video killed the radio star" vibes, felt like an alien broadcast from the future.
Sure, the gadgets were clunky. But they were full of possibility. That's why I still have a soft spot for 80s tech — it was the first time the future felt personal.