There is an old and, I believe, very wise saying handed down to me from my parents and grandparents viz 'What you've never had you never miss'. I remember as a small boy in the 50s thinking it incredulous that my mother (born 1916) did not listen to the radio, as BBC broadcasting didn't start until 1922, and that to go to the toilet she actually had to go outside the house and use the communal facilities in the back lane.
When I went up to university in 1972 the idea that before the end of the decade we would have a woman Prime Minister, or that within 20 years women would become priests in the C of E was generally laughed out of court. The state of the art form of entertainment equipment was the portable cassette player. How quaint that sounds now. I certainly did not imagine at the time that nearly 40 years on I would be able to purchase a piece of equipment wich would allow me to communicate almost instantaneously with anyone in the world at next no no cost.
I suppose my point is this: people in 1910 were generally no more, and no less, content with their lot than are people in 2010.