• TimeSquirrel
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    1 year ago

    I think OP is probably referring to gen-alpha. The millennial’s kids. The ones that are growing up never knowing a world without Minecraft or smartphones.

    • massive_bereavement
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      11 year ago

      Or have ever called a landline hoping the dad won’t pick it up, and then when he does fear for one’s own life.

      • Trebach
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        11 year ago

        I see you learned the arcane AT commands to keep the modem from screeching when you connected to the internet.

      • ivanafterall
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        01 year ago

        Or to look your crush up in the phone book after working up the courage for ages. Call, heart-racing. Parent answers. Ask for the girl. They yell across the house. One year later. “Hello?”

        “Hey, it’s me, ivanafterall.”

        “Who?”

        Classic rite of passage, am I right, guys!? We’ve all been there!

    • ivanafterall
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      11 year ago

      I’m 37. How do I co-exist with fully 100 different “generations?” I can’t keep up.

      • TimeSquirrel
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        1 year ago

        There’s only like, five or six alive right now. There’s the Baby Boomers (our parents, because most of our grandparents have died off by now), there’s the one after us, the Zoomers, which are Gen-X’s kids. Gen-X is the one that came right before us. You and me are millennials, I’m 40. Our kids are mostly gen Alpha. The first generation born entirely within the 21st century and have never known a world that wasn’t fully connected 24/7.

        • massive_bereavement
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          11 year ago

          While that can be well and true now, I had been called before Gen.X then Gen. MTV, there was a time when we were the screwed generation (with similar adjectives to it), then millennials (I was already working though before Y2K, and recently I heard someone refer to FPS from my teen years as a “boomer shooter”.

          I’ve been through more generation changes than a dragonball character.

          • ivanafterall
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            11 year ago

            Same. For years, it seemed, when that concept was introduced to me, I recall being Generation X. Then I’d hear “No, no, we’re Generation Y.” Then somehow I was a Millennial. I don’t know what I am anymore. I’m clinging to the original Generation X, if I have to have a label. It sounds cooler.