These feelings aren't mutually exclusive. I'm often like "I have no memory of this place" while my name stares at me from git blame, but that doesn't mean my intuition of how it's structured isn't highly likely to be right in such cases.
I juggle between various codebases regularly, some written by me and some not, often come back to things after not even months but years, and in my experience there's very little difference in coming back to a codebase after 6 months or after a week.
The hard part is to gain familiarity with the project's coding style and high level structure (the "intuition" of where to expect what you're looking for) and this is something that comes back to you with relative ease if you had already put that effort in the past - like a song you used to have memorized in the past, but couldn't recall it now after all these years until you heard the first verse somewhere. And of course, memorizing songs you wrote yourself is much easier, it just kinda happens on its own.
If you're interested in open handheld devices, the Librem 5 smartphone has its layouts, schematics, assembly drawings and 3D designs published on a free license:
I can assure you that their experience wasn't in any way exceptional. It may be different in the US as Catholicism is in the minority in there (~20%), while GP's experience is from a place absolutely dominated by it (>90%).
I remember how jarring it was to switch to the early smartphones that had to be charged daily. I was a teenager back then and my parents weren't happy to see my phone being plugged in every day. They caught up with times a few years later ;P
And it's not just that - most phones will throttle themselves on a deteriorated battery to limit current spikes that could cause brownouts. So not only your otherwise perfectly fine phone doesn't keep charge for long anymore, it literally becomes slower as it ages just because of its battery.
I lived through these times and what you describe is some alternative timeline to mine. Phones that could last several days of active use on a single charge had replaceable batteries with similar lifespan to those today and I don't recall anyone around me owning spare batteries to swap on-the-go. In fact, my Nokia 3410 only got its battery replaced in 2018 when I dug it out of the drawer (and I wasn't even its first owner in the family back in the day). Today's smartphones need battery replacement much sooner as they draw and charge with much more current and burn through the cycles faster.
Thank you for reminding me of Y2K! It's the perfect example of what happens when you forget about the people keeping things together.
My team and I worked really hard for several years to make sure that Y2K didn't have any effect, or at least a dramatically downsized one. It worked but I did hear from several people that they were annoyed that we spent so much money, time, and resources on something that turned out to be "not that big of a deal". Arrrgggghh!!
I have watched the first two seasons a few years ago and didn't continue because I was getting so emotionally invested it was making me anxious, not just in front of the screen but also for quite some time afterwards. I'm looking forward to finishing it once I decide my skin has grown thick enough :D
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