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by jcahill
2178 days ago
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The date slider section was straightforwardly about 'answering correctly'. If you can ballpark all of these events to the right decade or so, further granularity is unlikely to be related to perceptual distortions about time. Obvious example: the cassette question. Question: When were storage devices for audio commonly known as cassette tapes introduced? Expected answer: 1963. If "introduced" is intended to be read as shorthand for "sold in a retail market", then this question has no single answer grounded in one person's life experience. I was recalling the year of invention when I answered[1]. Citing "the early 1960s" will be good enough for anyone having a conversation about tech history. The year of the first retail release certainly isn't interesting or worth keeping in your head. Worse, the 1960s weren't even the decade most strongly associated with cassette tapes. So this is very much a neener-neener type of gotcha question. [1]: https://files.catbox.moe/h7hcuh.png |
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Ask important questions rather than random trivia too. People really remember when they watched a movie, rather than when it was released. When they used a Walkman/CD player/MP3 player/game console, not when they were first made.
Biographic memory not random historical facts.