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The one thing that has changed our industry
Our industry has changed in ways most of us cannot imagine...
When I first started in this industry.... Before you even thought about taking your first picture you have to design, build, and then maintain a computer (very difficult in the 1990s), then build a website (leaning HTML, server management), shooting content (Some of us scanned photos in by hand, and then for video we had to purchase and install special video cards), then get the traffic, then do the marketing, and then handle the affiliates... While talking girls into posing naked for cash. It was expensive too. I remember spending $500 on a single hard drive - and getting a free "zipp drive" along with it. These days... People who couldn't program the time on their VCR twenty years ago can build a website on their cell phone with little effort. It's gotten too easy. |
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Granted, we weren't producing our own content at the time. Digital cameras were still a few years away and we didn't have the resources to do film. Zip drives, geez...I remember those. We even had an HP Colorado travan tape drive at one point. But I still remember building our first PC-XT system with a 20mb HD and 640K of RAM. Twin 5 1/4" floppy drives. 2400baud Zoltrix modem which we eventually upgraded to a 14.4 USRobotics card. The capabilities of the S10 Galaxy I carry these days would've been unimaginable back then. As you say, so much easier these days for a monkey to use a smartphone to do all the things it took an entire desk workstation filled with hardware. |
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i remember getting a 4 gig hard drive and wondering how i was ever going to fill it up.
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I remember building web pages with Notepad, then Navisoft with Netscape Navigator. Built my first mainstream site in 1995. Frontpage just loaded up shit by the pound. Possibly the worst html editor ever.
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I just remember the spankings i got from my dad after the first monthly internet bill landet in his mailbox.
(converted about 1600 Euro) 3 Euro per hour for the 150 km long distance call to reach to only aol access point in my state and additional, 3 Euro aol fees per hour. |
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I jumped in deep end with dedicated server and no clue and faired better knowing nothing. I moved onto other projects but any sort of effort now starting requires a lot of knowledge and a lot more hard work to get a result.
My old crew have moved on or passed on.. Rip sad now |
I go back a bit further, with a bank of 20 or so VCRs built into shelves and wired together along with signal boosters and an even more expensive 'playback only motherdeck' to hold the mastertape... Then you had 'Shipping' on Tuesdays & Thursdays when you just spent all day applying labels and sending them out via Royal mail in discreet packaging.
This was in the days when a single decent VCR went for over £500 ($700) and the fine for sending 'obscene material' through the post was in the region of £30,000 ($42,500) and a minimum of 6 months to a year in Prison... That's when it was 'hard'... The web came along, and it was simply another place to advertise your mail order VHS tapes :upsidedow Thats without the costs of the initial tapes themselves, the camera to shoot the content on, and the girls were paid a lot better then, than they are now ! |
It may have gotten easier to build sites, but that doesn't mean shit. You still have to put in the work to be a success. Build it and they come doesn't work.
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"design, build and maintain a computer" rochard the architect / annoying boomer has moved on from repeating his marine service to repeating about him assembling his computers being a big deal, something many of us were doing in our early teens
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Let's not forget BHI / Yahoo's GeoCities where many of today's old school webmasters began.
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later there have been doctors that studied medicine now you have specialists for ears, heart, bones etc...and even they need other specialists to handle the equipment or invent new and more powerful equipment. every biz that is promising profits will be sooner or later occupied by specialists and while they compete with each other they will come up with new technologies that need new optimizations. amateur biz can be handled by amateur because they calculate far before the comma. professionals count far after the comma and make the profits with mass. |
Yeah, things are a bit easier now
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Wasn't cheap, but nothing was in those days... |
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:winkwink: |
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And before that I remember GW Basic command lines to fire up a program before we had a GUI. We eventually designed our own GUI before DOS. |
I love whenwe
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The problem with the Internet is people who could do the "design, build, maintain a computer, build a website (leaning HTML, server management), get the traffic, then do the marketing, and then handle the affiliates" thought they were skilled pornographers. Owning the right camera doesn't mean one can shoot content that will convert surfers. Same as owning the right computer doesn't mean you can use it. |
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Sure it is. But, one thing still remains the same selling things.
The problem with It industry is it is easy to enter. Anyone could be your competitor. You just need a laptop, an internet, your buddy programmer ans wola, you have started your own company. |
I fully agree that it is harder today. However, it isn't all bad.
Let me compare it to model photography (which I have been for 23 years). In the last 2 decades, thanks to digital photography, the number of photographers have exploded. People in the photography business are complaining that digital photography has destroyed the business. I don't believe that, it transformed the business. We are seeing creative work that we did not see in the 90's. "Professional" photographers are outdone by hobbyists and it is driving an evolution. Business-wise, the competition is huge, but people are still making a living. It's only a lot harder to enter and stay in the race. But making money is seldomly easy. I'm very new to the pornography business (as a creator. hehe), but I have the feeling that the same is true for porn. In the last 20 years, we have seen such an amazing revolution, from internetporn to VR. People are constantly looking for the new niche, which again adds to the porn world. |
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I've always preferred working my ass off in all the various fields than paying exorbitant compensation to middlemen. I was already proficient with the cameras, post-editing and most aspects of production...meanwhile my wife self-taught herself to html-code while I designed all the web graphics. The only aspect we third-party contracted was webhosting. And eventually we took that over ourselves. Marketing was primarily our achilles heel. We did a LOT of marketing and promotion, but we weren't as proficient as we could've been. That was the only area we regret not contracting out. |
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However, the number one thing that really changed this biz was adult friendly stable billing. CCBill and Netbilling come to mind. We have been with both since they first started. It was a breath of fresh air after scumbags crashed and burned. |
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