I remember first tinkering around with the net after it had exploded at the library, when even dial-up was relatively new, and then at school a little bit, but nothing really serious until I found roleplaying. It wasn't until my family got our own dial-up connection - but only three or four years ago - that my passion for the Internet really exploded, when I found that all this stuff I'd only heard about, including games (mostly between Kingdom of Loathing, NationStates [though that's more of a simulator than an actual game], a sad, serious, and recurring addiction to MapleStory, and most recently my new used PS3), the forums (where about 60% of my time has been spent), and so on, really existed for me now.
But even before then, I remember playing around on many game systems, some of which I went back and bought the games for again, and others of which I've found other means of finding. Really, by now, I can't think of living without the Internet, or the games that surround/permeate it now, but I do remember when TV was still the main form of entertainment for the young, and when books opened so many doors that it boggled the mind. Now, I can watch TV on my computer if I wanted to, and write my own volumes in characters that I designed with other people from all around. Unlike some, though, books still play a part in my life to an extent, and television is as much of a distraction as ever.
Maybe I'm just simple-minded, but getting snail mail still brings excitement to me, and reading a well-written action novel can still enthrall me for hours on end if I don't watch my time. But as the technology expands, pretty soon we may move away from paper altogether, and maybe television will become Internet-exclusive because its more convenient. Having actually seen some of the old equipment used for communication in the 'Old World' since my grandpa was a HAM radioman (though, sadly, none of it works now, due to time and disuse after his passing when I was barely old enough to walk >.<), living in a house that's quite possibly older than my grandma, having a mom that owns some old 45s and both parents that listen to music from their generation, there's been saturation. And since we didn't get our first computer (a 486, when they were on the way out) until I was about ten or twelve or so, I'm still finding out new things about the Internet all the time, and my parents are slowly starting to soak it in. Anymore, it'd be hard for me to imagine a world where technology just sagged and never moved forward. It just doesn't fit, because it hasn't happened... yet.
Eye-opening read, I must admit. Certainly something that makes one appreciate all of what's happening, and has happened. A world without the Internet would be bleak indeed, in my opinion...