Comment by sshine
2 months ago
Back then, programmers had to care about performance. The field of programming was less accessible, so the average skills to reach the barrier to entry were higher. So people were, on average, better programmers. The commercial incentives of today to reach market with something half-assed and then never fix it don’t help.
In 2002 I ran OpenBSD on my laptop (thus sacrificing wifi). The memory footprint of running X11, a browser, a terminal, and an editor: 28MB
Browsers are the big problem. Security and compatibility push upgrades to the latest, very heavy, ones.
[dead]
There was plenty of software that ran like absolute garbage “back then” but OS’s didn’t.