Read the warnings on the first post While there have always been many great artists (Katsuvy to name my current favorite), the art from your heyday (≈2014/2015 to early 2019) truly stood out in that we could
rely on it to look great (nearly) every time – almost in the way we can rely on the older Seagate Barracudas (ATA IV/V and 7200.7/8), high‑end Seasonic and Delta PSUs, and Panasonic and Rubycon electrolytic capacitors; your detailed yet exceptionally-clean style of the era radiated sheer joy (and still does
). Your “Students Attention Chart” in particular stood out for earnestly highlighting a social issue, yet depicting it in the most adorable way ever
(Not that I can blame the students, of course – lectures were originally meant to be transcribed by the students, not learned from directly…)
Moreover, your work was analogous to the (defunct) CPU company
Cyrix, in rising against the deck to achieve above‑and‑beyond competitors vastly more‑resourced than yourself. I won't name names in public, but just beware of the National Semiconductor (so to speak)
Using Yanni's music as a comparison – your older work was genuinely imaginative and inspiring (like Optimystique, and its follow-ups to a lesser extent).
Be under no illusion, your recent work is
not on the same creative level: Think of Yanni's albums If I Could Tell You and Ethnicity, when he begrudgingly embraced the “New Age” classification imposed on him from outside – they may have sold better for a while, but at the cost of betraying his original core fanbase.
Fortunately, Truth of Touch was a very-welcome return to his form; so perhaps you can later make a similar comeback…
Anyway, there's no need to be ashamed of falling off the career path(s) you once cherished; 20 years ago (back when Windows XP was functional-if-insecure; when Maxtor and Seagate were archenemies, Maxtor's junky DiamondMax Plus 8 & 9 put to shame by Seagate's ultra‑reliable Barracuda 7200.7 with 5‑year warranties on all capacities; and when the second-generation Western Digital Raptors provided 10krpm speed in desktop-friendly SATA), IT would have fitted me like a glove.
Nowadays we have the hopeless Windows 10 & 11 (Linux
is improving but still far from a wholesale Windows replacement); Seagate's “Rosewood” laptop drives which barely survive the 1-year warranty (their desktop counterparts may barely-survive 2 or 3 years); equally cheaped-out consumer SSDs which may or may not survive their 3‑year warranty (I only trust enterprise SSDs nowadays, and they aren't
overly expensive in the grand scheme of things), then will
severely lag (far worse than the HDDs you moved away from in the first place) and may or may not corrupt the data; consumer networking cards which are flaky from new (why I ended up keeping my 2011 TP‑Link TL‑WN781ND in my main PC, demoting the new and conspicuously-unshielded TL‑WN881ND to an older PC in the lounge); and overstressed, burning-out CPUs from both Intel and AMD. (Sure you can get much better PSUs now, but that's insufficient consolation.)
See also,
my essay on the rise and fall of HDD reliability…
The point is, Millennials in general (including me although I'm rather on the Millennial/Gen Z borderline) share the burden of having been born in a relatively-sane world (even much USA entertainment of that era seems saner than that anywhere in the current world!), and having to face the modern insanity head-on as we grew up. And no other generation can fully comprehend the sheer
depth of that degeneration, the way we do (Baby Boomers cling onto their crude entitlements, they and many Gen X have also grown too apathetic to care; while younger Gen Z and all Gen Alpha never experienced the older saner world)…