View Full Version : Learning new tech is hard
Onkel Neal
01-19-21, 09:34 AM
Man, this brings back memories. I remember getting the new dial phone. Of course, it was 20 years before my family got a single user line.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p45T7U5oi9Q
Jimbuna
01-19-21, 12:37 PM
We had one of them when I was a youngster then along came the space age Touch-Tone telephone.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCuhx5zvetg
Platapus
01-19-21, 12:57 PM
Making a long distance Phone call
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIbxEJp9oLQ
Do younglings these days even know what the concept of a long distance phone call is? I don't think so.
Bilge_Rat
01-19-21, 01:01 PM
I used to hate those, took a long time to dial and it was easy to make a mistake.
Aktungbby
01-19-21, 01:10 PM
/\ especially with a hangnail on your fu...errrr dialing finger :haha: ... as a night dispatcher at a '70's alarm central-station, my nail-clipper was essential equipment!
Then there were the truckstops in my Trukkin' Daze: "Hellow dispatch, this is Aktung; truck 2825..." every AM on on one of these before cell phones:https://i.pinimg.com/564x/94/6d/76/946d764f4130708af78d7e5503fde67a.jpg
nikimcbee
01-19-21, 01:34 PM
Well, drink your milk, cuz one day you'll grow up and can get a 300 baud modem!
:Kaleun_Thumbs_Up:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEb4I5y93uA
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Platapus
01-19-21, 05:05 PM
I remember reading articles advising people not to get the new 2400 baud modems as the phone lines would not be able to support it. :har:
Onkel Neal
01-19-21, 05:13 PM
Making a long distance Phone call
Do younglings these days even know what the concept of a long distance phone call is? I don't think so.
No kidding. I was absolutely forbidden to dial 1 and then a number, under penalty of an extreme ass whoopin' :oops:
As a kid, dialing 1 was not an option; if you wanted to make a long distance call, you had to dial 0, get an operator, tell her you wanted to make a long distance call, have her transfer you to a long distance operator, who would dial the call for you; sometimes, depending on the locale being called, you actually had to hang up and wait for the long distance operator to call you back once she had managed to make the connection(s); calling back then was very much as what you see in the old M*A*S*h reruns where radar has to get connected through to Seoul, then Tokyo, then wherever else just to get a call back to the states; I spent a summer in Central America in 1965 and when we had to make a call, even in the country we were in, it was a daisy chain of connections, so you kind of had to go to the telephone exchange (private phones were very expensive and rare), tell them who you wanted to call, and go home; there were always small groups of kids hanging out around the exchange ad, when your call was patched through, the telephone operator would dispatch one of the kids to you r home to alert you the call was ready, for which you tipped the kid...
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