Ask HN: What was your favorite present?
Mine: My wife enrolled me in a two week woodworking course. I made a table out of oak. It was so nice to focus on making something physical, be have the feeling of being "back in school" with kind, interesting classmates, and take a break from programing/ computers.
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bonus Q: Is there a gift idea that your significant other enjoyed that you can recommend?
24 comments
[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 64.9 ms ] threadFor that reason, my favorite gifts are
* Childcare over a few days - a parent helping so my wife and I can get away
* Donations to charities I care about
* Sentimental things / things kids make
That said ... just because I can buy something I want, doesn't mean I will - and someone else buying something for me because they want to means more than the thing :)
I had an early kindle for the longest time, no backlight, basic. I wanted to upgrade, I got my moneys worth out of the kindle for sure.
I was planning to get a new ereader during xmas and boxing day but nothing really went on sale last year. They were usually $200 for what I wanted but on these 'sales' they listed $300 scratched down to $250. I was planning to wait until they went on real sale but my wife got me one for my bday.
Backlight, physical buttons for back and forth. USB-C for charging. Oh ya, much like.
I had a look at my Mom’s early kindle 2 from 2009 this morning. I can’t help but to think of how well it has stood up considering it’s age. It is white, has page flipping buttons and a very modest round button keyboard at bottom. The screen is probably less than half of the area of the front face. And yet it has charm. I wouldn’t want to read anything that depends on layout or technical books on here, but for novels- I think it is great.
I had a friend that was the art teacher at the local community college. Was one of my favorite people. He slowly died of cancer a couple of years back. My wife purchased a frame print of a water color christmas tree of his. I almost lost it when I opened it. Means little to most, everything to me.
The best presents have meaning to those who receive them.
Another time, he got me a really great coffee grinder. He took his time doing research on them and picked the best possible option within his budget - which I think ended up being just the best option period, regardless of budget. I tend to be a little particular about equipment like that and really appreciate that he went to the effort of researching different types of grinders and didn't just pick a random one off the shelf. I would've appreciated the gesture regardless, but the knowledge that he took the effort to make an informed choice just made the gift that much more impressive (and timely, since this turned out to be just days before I self-isolated for a year... was great to have a proper grinder at home).
Secondly Sega Master System. Mind bending.
My first computer was a Hyundai 486 SX/25. Mind bogglingly large butterfly effect on my life.
While Wikipedia has a random function, there is nothing like flipping through the pages and letting your attention be drawn to a physical article.
My dad brought a Tandy 5000 home when I was in second grade. I am one of five children. We all enjoyed creating stories with a storybook program where you could place art and have the computer voice read what you wrote.
But I instantly was completely fascinated. I explored every program on it. Particularly this music making program, where you could write music for four instruments and hear it back. Fond memories of hitting the space bar and hearing it play out in our kitchen.
The big presents that stand out:
Commodore Vic 20 when I was about 6 so I started "programming" immediately. This was followed by a zx spectrum +3 a few years later and then again by the Commmodore Amiga 500.
My first BMX bike aged about 10
My first guitar aged about 15, still playing it over 30 years later, although I treated myself to another last year.
"Lesser" gifts I enjoyed, electronics building kits, chemistry set, microscope, BOOKS
Christmas 86 or 87 - Tonka front-end loader: my kids today still play with that thing (though the paint's peeling, and there're rusty spots all over, they have a blast with it)
birthday 1991 - a Tandy 102 laptop: it's what I learned to program on (with all of its 40x8 screen glory, 6.2 file naming, and 21446 bytes of storage (including file names))
birthday 1996 - Applied Cryptography 2d ed: my grandpa took me to Borders to pick out a book (or several) for my birthday. I assured him I not only was interested in that book, but that I'd read it. When my grandparents came back to visit for Christmas, I told him not only that I'd read it, but how much fun I'd had doing so (and what all it was about)
Christmas 2007 (or was it 08?) - my first netbook and Acer AspireOne: great battery life, decent built-in camera, solid wifi, ad would even run (a couple years later) Haiku. Took that puppy with me to Singapore to keep in touch with friends and family back home (including my now wife)
Father's Day 2018/2019 - flame socks. My kids picked them out because they'd be sure to keep my feet warm in the winter, since there are flames on the side :)