Or like Roby, you gathered round with la famiglia, cranked up the Victrola and sang along to Caruso "Hey Ma - there's no gabagool in dis thing!"
No they wouldn’t, people would lose their shit about not having access to all their distractions, and the people sucked into the alternate realities of their social media feeds would use that information void to blame the people they’ve been conditioned to hate. The psychological fallout would be at least as intense as that to our infrastructure.
I think it's worse than that. I assume industry is highly dependent on the internet. Certainly commerce is. I teach a lot of online classes - those would come to a screeching halt. Without the internet air travel would also ground to a halt (didn't that happen recently with SeaTac Airport?).
If my neighborhood manages to have available a reasonable local food source, water and electricity, then I think I would survive fine. I could probably help with the food distribution, since I'd have to stop working until society adjusts. Other than that, I'd mostly hide with my wife and daughter in a basement full of books, and I'd have to dig through my boxes to find old CDs and an old CD player that I think (I hope) I still have somewhere. I don't have guns, so I don't know how I would protect myself from the crazies who would come out. Maybe we could organize a neighborhood militia to protect ourselves. Surely some neighbors are likely to have some sort of weapons.
Food would really be the main problem. Sooner or later - a week or two in some areas, maybe longer in others - people in cities will run out of food. Money will stop working - I mean, I guess some folks might accept cash, but that only goes so far and it's only useful if lots of people are accepting cash, and most people don't have a lot of cash, and any other form of money relies on the internet. The barter system only works when people have things to barter with, and those of us in the information economy can't really trade database programming for goods and services. When money stops working, people stop working - the trucks that bring food into the cities will stop, and the people working on the farms will stop if they're not getting paid, and then there will be food riots (@spejic might not want to read that part) and the survivors will starve or disperse into the countryside to live off the land. The only way it works out is if a strongman seizes power and forces people to keep working with some kind of alternative payment that doesn't rely on the internet. A magnanimous strongman who only wants what's good for the people, but has enough muscle to get everyone to cooperate. A far more likely outcome is petty warlords who gather weapons and fight amongst themselves for scraps of the remaining society.
As long as it happens while I'm on a South Pacific island - my anthropological training will be very useful!
Countries with a strong collective spirit and relatively uniform culture would do better. The US would be ********ed.
I actually was in the Peace Corps on a small atoll in the Pacific, living in, essentially, a stick hut for a year and a half without electricity, running water, the whole bit. I didn't miss TV after a month, really. It's amazing what you can get used to when necessary. Of course, as I got closer to getting back to society, my desire to catch up on TV shows and eat a damn cheeseburger were pretty intense. This was over 20 years ago, so who knows if the current generation could function without their accoutrements they've had attached to themselves since birth, but, in my experience, one adapts more easily than you might think.
I work in a big building full of food. I'll be fine. My job will be protecting it from the likes of you until we figure things out. Frankly, our supermarket is a lot less high-tech than people think. We could do 90% of our infrastructure tasks just on the phone if we had to. I seem to recall supermarkets existing before the internet. Even credit cards existed then, although they kind of sucked. I don't think its possible for the internet to be out that long anyway. The whole reason it was started was to make something that would survive a nuclear war.
It's full of food -- much of which is perishable. Likely the shelves will be picked clean by looters within a week or two.
Near Butaritari then? I'm guessing your name means something in i-Kiribati (if I had to guess I'd go with "old man" or something like that based on some gender terms I'm familiar with for Butaritari).
Kind of a chicken-and-egg thing, maybe. The only way we could lose the internet for a full half a year would be if things had gone to shit.