• hansolo@lemmy.today
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    19 days ago

    Paper maps weren’t hard to use. Many people in large cities just had a detailed map books that gave you street level detail.

    https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/1998-thomas-guide-map-los-angeles-3702771636

    Also, the 30 minutes gimmick was shortlived in reality, and only for Dominoes. It relied heavily on a very small delivery range from each store.

    Ended after too many delivery drivers got into accidents.

    https://www.tastingtable.com/1949627/dominos-thirty-minute-delivery-explained/

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Paper maps weren’t hard to use.

      I remember being taught how to use maps in elementary school. Now I can’t help but wonder if that’s taught at all these days.

      I know way too many adults who are 100% reliant on their GPS for everything. I find it kind of sad. I spent my early driving years attempting to get lost, then laughing because I always seemed to figure out where I was. I developed a skill that quickly became rare, learning landmarks, recognizing highway numbers, and eventually navigating on vibes because I was already so familiar with the road system that, deep down, I already knew which way was right (even if I didn’t consciously put it all together.)

      I bet that kind of navigation seems like magic to young people today.

      • namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev
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        18 days ago

        I remember being taught how to use maps in elementary school. Now I can’t help but wonder if that’s taught at all these days.

        For what it’s worth, I was never taught how to use a paper map but always found it easy to do.

        But I definitely agree about over-reliance on GPS is pretty sad. I love the fact that I can just try a different route and see where it takes me. Sure, I sometimes waste 20 minutes doing the opposite direction of what I want, but I also discover new things along the way which is really nice.