It had me wondering if the earliest models would have been made of still. Also I am wondering when the party line service stopped? I was born in the 70's, and this video is not really informative to me, because not enough changed. Also when did you start and stop burning your trash, if you lived in an apartment and they were just burning the trash? I think I have an idea when but I'm not sure. I was living in a house by the way, so I never paid to much attention to that.
@@wheelieblind Party lines were still available in our area through the mid 1980s at least. I don't think they were advertised, you had to know that they were available, and request them from the phone company.
I remember when I was in grade school I was assigned to run the projector whenever the classroom needed it. That meant going to the closet retrieving the projector and movie, threading it and playing it for the class. I recall the tricky part was making sure your loop above and below was accurate so the picture didn’t stutter.
I remember way too many of these items. My parents had a party line and warned me not to talk about anything you didn't want the neighbors to know because Agnes always listened. And she wasn't shy about it. My grandmother said Agnes would sometimes call her up wanting to ask questions about something she had overheard when grandma was using the phone. I was one of the last graduating classes in high school to be taught how to use a slide rule. I learned to type on a manual Royal typewriter. I remember when mom and dad replaced the old kitchen tube radio with a transistor radio. And I just got a phone book in the mail a couple weeks ago - so some of these things are still with us.
In the early 1980s, I visited a family who had moved from Los Angeles to a very rural Missouri area. They had a party line and their very local phone company had a switchboard operator. Then, the telephone company was sold to Contel? (Continental Telephone) and, after new electronic equipment was installed in a new building, the operator was happily retired after over 40 years service with a pension and customers received new *_Touchtone_* phones and private lines.
i remember my Grandparents having a party line. And having to interupt the people on their calls bc it was an emergency. i would always try to sneak in and listen to the conversations going on. even though i didn' really know who the people were. when i would get caught i would get the standard lecture about how it was very "naughty and impolite", but i was mischevious, and it made me feel like i was a super spy. and the temptation to pick up that phone as i was walking by just to see if anyone was on it was just too much! when g'ma told me it was impolite though i got brazen enough to ask permission to listen in! After all if you had permission it couldn't be naughty or impolite. i never got punished for it, although we did have a very lengthy conversation about privacy. that was punishment enough for a 5 yr old who had places to be, things to do, and mischief to attend to..
I will be turning 70 in a couple of months. I was able to remember each and every item that the presenter explored. From manual typewriters to aluminum (corrected from steel by @Starshadow). I saw it all. One of the things from the 60s that I remember was the baker truck that would sell baked goods from door to door. Boy that trucked smell so delicious as the man pulled out that long wood tray from the back of his truck. This video has reminded me just how far I have come.
I learned to type on an old 1925 Underwood manual typewriter. My first transistor radio (1959) was a Viscount radio with a single earplug. It was AM only, and monaural. We got milk from the Giacapuzzi dairy, our bread from Helm's delivery trucks, and there were TWO mail deliveries each day. Morning mail and evening mail. My first recorder was a reel to reel Ehrcorder. When cassettes came in, I got a Panasonic cassette recorder. I finally acquired an IBM Office Electric typewriter for my 16th birthday. WOW! Later, I got a Selectric Uni-ball typewriter! I could change fonts! YAY! My first computer was a Commodore-64. My first camera was a Kodak Instamatic, with popup flash and film cassettes. We have come a long way, indeed!
Most things made decades ago were expensive to buy, but generally were made to last and to be repaired, unlike the throw-away society we live in today where virtually NOTHING can be repaired and ends up in the landfill. Single use plastics and packaging should be banned. Milk and soda tasted better in glass returnable bottles and are better for the environment, even considering that they had to be washed before refilling.
The Technology Connections channel has a video about the Sunbeam Radiant Control Toaster, titled *_This Antique Toaster Is Better Than Yours_* . They were made from the 1940s through the 1980s. I found an early 1950s example in a thrift store for $5 about 10 years ago. An ad from the 1950s for the same model lists a price of $29.95. CPI calculator said that's equivalent to about $310 when I bought it. And, it's still working!
While glass bottles were more environmentally friendly, and a source of income for children finding and returning them the the store for the deposit, there was a disadvantage. I remember, in the 1950s, my brother getting a bottle (if I remember correctly, it was Coke) and finding a cigar butt in it.
@memyname1771 A cigar butt in a soda bottle! That's an awesome food horror story ! I don't know if she made these stories up, but growing up in the 1950s, Mom told us about: - working in a candy factory and the foreman going on a catwalk above a vat and spitting his "chaw" of tobacco into it; - working in the Lipton tea packing plant and sweepings from the floor being packed; - that time a canning company offered a $100 reward for the can of greenbeans that a worker had lost a thumb in; - the time an ice cream parlor was selling weight loss milk shakes that worked because they had tapeworm eggs in them. But then, she'd set me in front of the TV on Saturday afternoon and we'd watch horror movies.
Yes, Dad taking all the tubes out for a trip to the store. I don't remember, though, if the cabinet below was locked. Maybe I shop in the wrong store, but so much is in locked cabinets: detergent & bleach; eye drops; skin lotions and,of course, alcoholic beverages.
So many memories with this video. I would ride in the Milk Man's delivery truck as he made the rounds to the other houses on our ranch. It was Borden Milk. He would give me an ice cream sandwich when we came back to the main gate where our house was. I also worked with a bee keeper who maintained hives on our ranch. Chopped and picked cotton, picked citrus and grapes. Played all day in the orchards and swam in the ditches in the summer. Simpler times, slower life.
I remember very well, especially in elementary school, what a treat it was when they showed us a film with a projector. The problem was that I always fell asleep. The darkened room and whirring of the projector were just very relaxing.
@@daghlren Or you seeing the Beatles' "Abbey Road" album cover on a children's bookbag in Walmart. That was equivalent to seeing a sheet music cover from 1912 when I was that age!
We did not have a recycling problem back then. We Reused everything and then reused it again. Even food scraps went into the garden. There was very little that actually wound up in the trash at all. Those obsolete milk bottles were never a problem that needed recycling unless they were broken.
24:37 you still need them for digital over the air TV if you're in an area with marginal reception. The VHF-low antennas (the ones with elements about 2m wide) aren't used anymore, but VHF-High and UHF definitely are. Furthermore, a satellite dish is also just another form of roof mounted antenna.
Yep, outdoor antenna sales are up. The cheap "in the window" junk should be avoided. With a good outdoor antenna most metro areas have ~ 80 to 90 channels available.
Except for the TV tester unit, I remember all the thinks listed, most of which I or my wife have used. We still have a number of those items shown in this video. I remember things going back to the late 1940s when I was very young. My mother bought our 1st TV in 1953. It had a 12" screen. My mother had a foot-petal driven sewing machine. I remember the milkman delivering bottled milk and the coal man delivery coal. I also remember the ice man delivering ice for the refrigerator. There was also a man who had a large wagon pulled by a horse. We called him the "rag man. He would come by once or twice a month yelling, "Rags, paper, rags". Finally, I remember cars that were started with hand cranks.
Thanks for sharing @DrinkingStar. I remember all of it with the exception of the ice man, milk man and the coal man. As a young boy living in eastern Canada, which has really cold winters, heating was a must. Instead of coal, I can remember an oil truck with a reel at its back containing a long black hose with an nozel at it's end. The delivery person would pull out the hose and stretch it along the side of our home to reach a capped oil pipe. He would then unlock the cap and proceed to fill the tank that fueled the heater system in the basement. Old memories has this video brought back to mind.
@@SWExplore Thanks for leaving the comment. I see in your home page there were a number of videos of beaches. I've been to the beach in Santa Cruz in California. I went to California to compete in the 1985 Masters America Bodybuilding Competition. I have spent my life looking for the perfect beach. You might like some of my beach videos on RUclips
We had milk BOXES by the back door., The milkman would drive up to the back door, remove empty milk bottles from the box, and put the standing order for milk in the insulated box. We also had a man come up the driveway with bread, a standing order. He tried to sell us tins of potato chips and pretzels, but didn't get a sale very often. And, yes, we had ice trays, of course.
We had a milk box on the front porch and the milk bottles had paper caps. At times during the winter the non homogenized milk would freeze and you would find the frozen cream standing over an inch out of the bottle neck with the cap sitting on top.
We had silver foil tops on our bottles and it was quite common, especially in the winter months to find a large hole in the foil top made by starlings and the like, stealing the fat rich cream off the milk. We had to throw the rest away.🤬
The house I had until about ten years ago still had a little door next to the front door. It had a door inside, too. The milkman would make his deliveries by putting the fresh bottles inside the little cubbyhole, and when the bottles were empty you'd put them in there for him to collect. The house also had a coal chute - though the door had been bolted shut by one of the previous owners. Yup, for coal deliveries from the days when the house had a coal-fired furnace. At some point the house had been 'upgraded' to an oil furnace, and in the 1970s to gas. It sounds like this house was ancient, doesn't it? It was actually surprisingly 'modern' - built in 1948, when Toledo was expanding into the rural areas surrounding it.
@@Gary-Seven-and-Isis-in-1968 We had the same every winter. Milk was never thrown away. Used to drink water from the river as well. I remember tasting a worm.
Back then we had to memorize important phone numbers. There was no 911, we had to dial the number to police, sheriff, fire department or hospital. Pay phones were everywhere and it was common for one to ask stranger for a dime or later a quarter for pay phone. Cell phones were out in the 70s but only in big cities.
I used those computer punched cards in 1976-1980. I still have one stack of the cards with my favourite computer program on the cards. Nostalgia - the great trash retainer! :-))
@@samiam619I just found two $25. punch card U.S. Savings Bonds I bought with my Savings Stamps in 6th grade back in the ‘60s 😊 Worth about $200. today.
In high school, I used a slide rule in advanced trig. Saved up my money to purchase a four function calculator. It ran on three 'AA' batteries and was the size of a paperback book. 3 months later a 6 function, credit card sized one was being given away as a promotion at one of the local car dealers, it ran on solar power.
The reel to reel tape machines made by companies such as Studer Revox, Otari, Pioneer, Nagra, Sony, Ampex, Byer, Teac, and others, still are the gold standard for audio reproduction.
Yes, but this one at 3:37 was the Grundig TK24 made in Fürth, Germany. I remember this one, I did have a different brand, but a friend had it. I still have my Tandberg 10 XD.
Even though only a decade or two away from the 1970s and 80s; alot of stuff from the 1960s feel so old. Though milk bottles and typewriters are debatable. Milk in glass bottles is still a thing. For security reasons, there are government agencies around the world that use typewriters.
and most of the last ones made had a correction key that you pressed down then retyped the letter to erase what you mistyped or you just use wight out.
I had, or even still have, pretty much all of those things. It is easier to list the things I didn't (or don't) have. I think there is only one; the vacuum tube tester. I never had one of those, but everything else, from party line telephone service and home milk delivery to a slide rule and cathode ray TV (both of which I STILL have), I had.
I was born in January 1963 and can still remember walking with my older brother down to the local 7-11 convenience store in Ft. Lauderdale, must have been 1967 or 68, to test tubes from our tv on the tube tester the store had. Simpler times then.
Hand cranked record players were not really a thing in the 1960s - they vanished mostly in the 1930s. There were certainly 'portable' players, but most of them still needed to be plugged into a wall outlet. 'Portable' only meant that you could carry it easily from room to room, or maybe out to the porch or patio. There were battery-operated record players as well, but they were usually fairly small units. And, record players are not realy 'obsolete'. A bit outdated, perhaps, but there is still a significant industry making and selling record players, everything from a sub $100 portabls (Can you say 'Crosley' and 'Victrola'? I knew you could...!) on up to precision unis costing thousands.
White out which still exists today was literally one of the end-all and beals for clearing out mistakes made by your typewriter it was a liquid substance with a little brush and some of them were not even liquid some of them had a little paper that you would put and then you would type over the letters that you made a mistake with and it would clear them away I mean as much as those things did which was to turn them white to make a long story short here that has existed and it still exists the white out.
A lot of the items and most of pictures/videos look much more "1950's" to this man who was born in the late 1950's and grew up in the 1960's. The clothes, hair, cars and much more look 50's all they way.
@cindykaeding9196 I remember my Grandmother lived in Arkansas in 1968 and she had a Party Line. Every time she went to make a call her cousin was yakking away on the line😂🤣😅
My freshman year of college, 1978, we were the first class that didn't have to use punch cards to program the computer. We had teletypes and CRT terminals to communicate with the mainframe. However we had to wait for most of our results to be printed out by a line printer and picked up from the cumputet center. We played with the card punchers and woud punch our first mame into to card so you could read it when you held it up to the light. Mine would read BILL.
Reel-to-reel tape machines are less popular than turntables, even among audiophiles. This is not due to the cost of the machines but rather the availability of new reels.
Hi quality low noise tape, higher taoe speeds, and Dolby and dbx noise reduction systems all but eliminated tape hiss ....both in R to R tapes and cassettes!
A friend’s mother worked with computer punch cards and sometimes would bring a bag of the discarded punches for us to use as confetti. It was the BEST!
Nice video, thanks. I’d like to add that Philips introduced the C-cassette in 1963 and I had Philips C-cassette player in my (dad’’s) car in 1970 here in Finland. And I always had girls in my car as I played Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix and CCR as loud as possible. 😁
You underestimate the power of the sliderule. It calculated sines, cosines, powers of X and many more. It could not find the decimal point. This meant that the person using a sliderule had to have some idea of what the answer should be
Yep, the slide rule more-or-less forced you to pay at least some attention to what you were doing. With the advent of calculators, it became very easy simply to punch in the numbers and read the result. It was also very easy to be off by a factor of ten, one hundred, a thousand or more. You learned the hard way.
Vacuum tubes are not completely obsolete. The giant amplifiers used by rock bands still have them. They sound better when overdriven than transistors. TV antennas are not obsolete either. In rural areas, outside antennas are used to receive broadcast digital television. Sometimes they are used in non-rural areas to pick up more stations.
The coolest thing about vacuum tubes was that people repaired their own TVs (or got their husbands to do it), and electronics stores had tube testers for customers to test their own tubes.
Some areas had the testers in supermarkets and drugstores, too. Went to the Thrifty Drugstore many times with Dad to hold the cigar box of tubes. Couple of times we got ice cream cones.
My grandmother, who had worked for Philco, was our handyman and TV repairman. She was very good at pulling the chassis out of the television cabinet, testing voltages and tubes, and fixing the set. She also did all the household fix-its, as well as all the painting in the house. Incredible woman. Having lived through the Depression, she was the original recycler. Everything has a worth, and we saved things that could be re-used. She could squeeze 12 cents out of every dime. And she could break down the trash to the point where our trash for the week (for a family of 6) fit in a brown paper grocery bag, with the top folded over and taped with brown kraft paper tape.
I installed a TV antenna in June 2024. My sister decided to go full-streaming at her apartment, where she had WiFi but no free cable. To get local, over-the-air channels she had to have an antenna to pick up the broadcast signal. The antenna, purchased at Best Buy, was just a plastic doohickey that we installed behind the TV. So, not a rooftop antenna, but if I hadn't remembered the antennae from my youth, I wouldn't have known to install a similar device in her home. Her son couldn't conceive of an "antenna". He just couldn't wrap his brain around it.
I still have my Mom’s Brownie camera and my Dad’s instamatic. They sit on top of my bookcase in my kitchen that holds my cookbooks. We still get a phone book.
I used to have the metal ice tray but it was aluminium, not stainless steel, and sadly broke. I still have a super 8 and regular 8mm projector and slide projector, and even an old Imperial typewriter! In the UK many people still have a TV antenna/aerial as well as possible access to cable/satellite/streaming Internet services. I also still have two barometers, though I must admit I rarely look at them. Milk in glass bottles still prevails in some parts of the UK as does the milkman. Still have a couple of slide rules but have long forgotton how to use them :-( And the fact that vehicles no longer have an ashtray and cigar/ciaretter lighter is - I am sure - an annoyance to many smokers. Several obsolete things not mentioned such as 5.25" and the smaller 3.5" floppy discs, 8 track players, rotary dial phones - still have one but no longer connected to a land line. Can you imagine having to dial an 11 digit number on one? As for telephone books they were useful as was Yellow Pages. Internet search services don't always provide what one maybe looking for and Directory Inquiry services can cost anything between £4.44 and £16.00 and even more if you want to be connected.
I remember absolutely loving a certain typewriter that came out in the 80s it was a newfangled when it had a little screen in front so that before you press the return button you could check to make sure that you hadn't misspelled anything so that way that it was correct before it would be printed out by the machine with its little ball in the middle.
Ah - the slide rule! Y husband is a retired aerospace Engineer (Purdue 1972) who used a slide rule which he still has somewhere. I recently asked him if he remembers how to use it and he admitted that he didn’t have a clue - he probably hadn’t used it in over 40-45 yesrs! He bought a brand new TI (Texas Instrument) hand calculator in 1972 for close to $300 - we may still have that! I learned and quickly forgot - think I slammed it in the door of my HS locker and broke it😧
I remember in my Junior year we had to take a "computer class" which the teacher started the class with, " this is already out dated and not used any more but we have to teach a computer class so here is how you punch cards to program a computer." He proceeded to teach us punch cards. One and only time I ever saw one. lol
That is funny! I can remember seeing my parent's phone bill, or some bill, and seeing the punch card that had to be returned along with your cheque. Lots of stuff has happened since I was born in the mid-50s.
Plastic was not a ice tray improvement. In fact it was the opposite. I grew up with plastic ice trays, and most of the time it wasn't as easy to get the ice out, as the 1s in this video. Another issue was durability. It's common after enough years and decades of use, the plastic 1s break or crack.
Sorry, but those Ice cube trays were not steel. They were Aluminum. I did see a stainless version there, but the masses had Aluminum. I guess the rich folk had the stainless, because in the 60s stainless was expensive. These days stainless is used widely and relatively cheap.
I remember party lines, too. When visiting my elderly grandmother who lived in Côte Ste Paul, Montreal, I remember picking up the heavy black handset in a bedroom and hearing some man or woman going on about their daily lives. I also found it funny and can even remember the other speaker recognizing the 'click' when someone would pick up, and tell me to hang up right away...LOL
@@SWExplore yes we had the party lines too I even had a boyfriend that had a party line and somebody used to listen while we talked and he used to tell them to get off the phone hahaha.
Hey some of these items are making a coming back. Like tube audio amplifier, turn table and vinyle disk and even tape recording is also making a comeback.
The ice cube trays were not stainless steel but rather aluminium as you showed in the video. I remember using all those items, including the party line phone, the slide-rule, and manual typewriter.
I was born in 1979 & my parents got the 1st camcorder we had in 1989. I taught myself how to use it. But what I was gonna say is my family never had reel-to-reel tape. Our home recordings were on VHS.
Dad was an engineer with Altec Lansing. He showed me how to use a slide rule when I was in elementary school. Mom was a data punch operator at Autonetics. I still have the punch card Christmas wreath she made!
I was gifted an IBM portable electronic calculator in 1975. I remember it's display had bright red numbers. It used 4 AA batteries and also had a plug in adapter.
I remember a lot of these. Luckily and if you have deep pockets, you can still get manual typewriters (I still have one - I find tapping on the keys therapeutic) and portable record players. Vinyl records are now collectibles, back when the album case was an art form. Many of these items from the past were a lot more eco-friendly, than today's plastic world. Back then, you paid to get things fixed, now they are so cheaply produced, that buying a new one is cheaper than fixing an old one. Again, things were far more eco-friendly in those old days. Sadly, cheap goods and cheap manufacturing have taken over. Many jobs were lost too, such as milkman jobs, etc. I appreciate some improvements that focused on safety guidelines, etc. Us folk over the age of 60, fondly remember those days, as simpler and more peaceful times, when family values mattered. Thanks for the memories.
I also remember the transparencies that were made by taking Xerox of the documents. These were then use with light projectors to make presentation. Transparencies need to be changed manually like we change slides on the laptop presentation nowadays
2:17 i doubt addition and multiplication were done much by slide rule. Those things are as fast and more accurate if done on paper or in your head. Slide rules - i think - were much more useful for trigonometry and such, things that you would otherwise need a book of sin/cos/tan tables for.
@@SWExplore If you would like, I would be happy to share some links to contemporary tube amplifiers. However, if you prefer to conduct your own search, that is completely fine as well.
It's for the soft clipping, i.e. the way it follows the analog wave form. There was an old joke about using a high power class A amplifier heat your room.
I was in college during the transition from slide rules to calculators. My freshman year, calculators were banned from exams in chemistry and physics. By the time I was a senior, I had a class (numerical methods) where a calculator was required.
In Edmonton, Alberta, you can still get phone books, but you have to order them; they're no longer delivered automatically. I've found the white pages to be more current than the online directory. There's also a dairy in Edmonton that still sells milk in glass bottles.
In 1954-58 my high school speech class used a reel-ro-reel tape recorder. In 1959, I remember a man walking into an office in a cloud of music. He had a transistor radio in his pocket. Automatic correction was possible in the 1960s electric typewriter. It backspaced and used white-out in the ribbon to redo the typo.
While that was before I was born, if I had asked my late father about that he would probably have joked that he rode on the back of a dinosaur to get to the drug store. 😂 Lol Unfortunately, that older generation is dying of old age. RIP 🪦
In the 1950's movie, "The Invisible Boy", there's a scene where some military officers want a super computer to analyse a problem. The operator agrees so they open their briefcase an hand him a dog-eared punch card. From that one card, 80 characters, the super computer solves the complex problem.
We had a party line, and I used a slide rule in my school maths exams in the early 70s. When I started work, there was only one computer in our company, and it used punch cards. My mother got a washing machine that used punch cards. You fed in a different card for each programme, (eg hot wash, cold wash, fast spin, slow spin etc). I learned to type on a manual computer, using carbon paper if you wanted several copies, because there were no photocopiers.
Damn, how my parents hated having a party line! My dad was on emergency standby and finally his company agreed to pay for a private line. When I retired in 2001 they made a big deal at my retirement party over some of my records being on punch cards. My younger co-workers had no idea how they were used! My father refused to buy a color TV until he said, they perfected them. After I had moved out and got married my parents finally bought a RCA color TV. It spent more time in the repair shop then it did in their living room! My first radio was an amplified transistor model I built in shop class, I still have it and it still works!
There was 8 ways to load the slides into the carousel and only one of them was correct. People would often put a mark in the exposed corner once you got it right so that you can quickly load it correctly next time. Slide film produced much better quality than prints from negatives--especially with Kodak Kodachrome.
The vacuum tube testers that were shown were used by repair technicians etc., they failed to show the ever common tube testers that were found in a lot of drugstores etc. at the time where a homeowner could test their own tubes.
Plenty of things to remember here and a few surprises, like the ultrasound record cleaner. My ultrasound destroys some plastics, I guess it must be different somehow.🤷🏼♂ Some areas still have a morning milk round, but it surely is struggling to survive within the modern environment.
21:17 I still use a stand-alone digital alarm clock. It is one of three clocks that I set to wake me up. The other two are my cellphone and my smartwatch.
I still have my mom's Smith-Corona typewriter. The last time I used it was about thee years ago in oeder to fill a security form for work and that was because the forms were not formated for direct completion. I even had to repaire it before using it.
My first semester in College was the last time that a slide-rule course was offered. Desktop calculators were permitted in most courses by that time. Can you guess how old I am?
My 2004 Infiniti G35c with a cassette player and 6 disc CD changer had an ashtray and lighter. The 2001 Acura CL-S I had before was available with the "smokers package" but mine was a velvet lined compartment. It's interesting how that works. Americans either smoke or they don't. A lot of Europeans smoke socially. Smoking is popular in Asia.
CDs were the center gem for a while. Streaming and down-loading music is very common in 2024. Today new vinyl records out sell new CDs. In 2023, 43 million records sold and only 37 million CDs sold in USA. New and used vinyls sell at 'premium' prices. Record players new and used are still popular. Record cleaning equipment, from basic to advanced, is still selling well even though it is an outdated technology. Want and need are separate realities.
The trays were mostly aluminum, not steel. I still have a set of ice cube trays.
yep. that was before everything was made from plastic. and before plastic became a worldwide pollution problem- thanks to the recycling scam
Yeah they were all aluminum it's like they don't even care they're just click baiting the kids
@@PerspectiveEngineer There were many that were stainless as the vid states. I have sets of them I still use.
It had me wondering if the earliest models would have been made of still. Also I am wondering when the party line service stopped? I was born in the 70's, and this video is not really informative to me, because not enough changed. Also when did you start and stop burning your trash, if you lived in an apartment and they were just burning the trash? I think I have an idea when but I'm not sure. I was living in a house by the way, so I never paid to much attention to that.
@@wheelieblind Party lines were still available in our area through the mid 1980s at least. I don't think they were advertised, you had to know that they were available, and request them from the phone company.
I remember when I was in grade school I was assigned to run the projector whenever the classroom needed it. That meant going to the closet retrieving the projector and movie, threading it and playing it for the class. I recall the tricky part was making sure your loop above and below was accurate so the picture didn’t stutter.
I remember way too many of these items. My parents had a party line and warned me not to talk about anything you didn't want the neighbors to know because Agnes always listened. And she wasn't shy about it. My grandmother said Agnes would sometimes call her up wanting to ask questions about something she had overheard when grandma was using the phone. I was one of the last graduating classes in high school to be taught how to use a slide rule. I learned to type on a manual Royal typewriter. I remember when mom and dad replaced the old kitchen tube radio with a transistor radio. And I just got a phone book in the mail a couple weeks ago - so some of these things are still with us.
In the early 1980s, I visited a family who had moved from Los Angeles to a very rural Missouri area. They had a party line and their very local phone company had a switchboard operator.
Then, the telephone company was sold to Contel? (Continental Telephone) and, after new electronic equipment was installed in a new building, the operator was happily retired after over 40 years service with a pension and customers received new *_Touchtone_* phones and private lines.
i remember my Grandparents having a party line. And having to interupt the people on their calls bc it was an emergency. i would always try to sneak in and listen to the conversations going on. even though i didn' really know who the people were. when i would get caught i would get the standard lecture about how it was very "naughty and impolite", but i was mischevious, and it made me feel like i was a super spy. and the temptation to pick up that phone as i was walking by just to see if anyone was on it was just too much! when g'ma told me it was impolite though i got brazen enough to ask permission to listen in! After all if you had permission it couldn't be naughty or impolite. i never got punished for it, although we did have a very lengthy conversation about privacy. that was punishment enough for a 5 yr old who had places to be, things to do, and mischief to attend to..
I just turned 60 a couple of weeks ago and thanks a lot for the memories of the past thank you.🇺🇲👋🇺🇲
I just turned 61 a couple weeks ago
I will be turning 70 in a couple of months. I was able to remember each and every item that the presenter explored. From manual typewriters to aluminum (corrected from steel by @Starshadow). I saw it all. One of the things from the 60s that I remember was the baker truck that would sell baked goods from door to door. Boy that trucked smell so delicious as the man pulled out that long wood tray from the back of his truck. This video has reminded me just how far I have come.
YA and when you garbed them from the freezer your dam fingers stuck the tray
This was entertaining and fun. I grew up in the 60’s and remember all of these.
I learned to type on an old 1925 Underwood manual typewriter. My first transistor radio (1959) was a Viscount radio with a single earplug. It was AM only, and monaural.
We got milk from the Giacapuzzi dairy, our bread from Helm's delivery trucks, and there were TWO mail deliveries each day. Morning mail and evening mail.
My first recorder was a reel to reel Ehrcorder. When cassettes came in, I got a Panasonic cassette recorder. I finally acquired an IBM Office Electric typewriter for my 16th birthday. WOW! Later, I got a Selectric Uni-ball typewriter! I could change fonts! YAY! My first computer was a Commodore-64. My first camera was a Kodak Instamatic, with popup flash and film cassettes.
We have come a long way, indeed!
Most things made decades ago were expensive to buy, but generally were made to last and to be repaired, unlike the throw-away society we live in today where virtually NOTHING can be repaired and ends up in the landfill. Single use plastics and packaging should be banned. Milk and soda tasted better in glass returnable bottles and are better for the environment, even considering that they had to be washed before refilling.
The Technology Connections channel has a video about the Sunbeam Radiant Control Toaster, titled *_This Antique Toaster Is Better Than Yours_* . They were made from the 1940s through the 1980s. I found an early 1950s example in a thrift store for $5 about 10 years ago. An ad from the 1950s for the same model lists a price of $29.95. CPI calculator said that's equivalent to about $310 when I bought it. And, it's still working!
While glass bottles were more environmentally friendly, and a source of income for children finding and returning them the the store for the deposit, there was a disadvantage. I remember, in the 1950s, my brother getting a bottle (if I remember correctly, it was Coke) and finding a cigar butt in it.
@memyname1771 A cigar butt in a soda bottle! That's an awesome food horror story !
I don't know if she made these stories up, but growing up in the 1950s, Mom told us about:
- working in a candy factory and the foreman going on a catwalk above a vat and spitting his "chaw" of tobacco into it;
- working in the Lipton tea packing plant and sweepings from the floor being packed;
- that time a canning company offered a $100 reward for the can of greenbeans that a worker had lost a thumb in;
- the time an ice cream parlor was selling weight loss milk shakes that worked because they had tapeworm eggs in them.
But then, she'd set me in front of the TV on Saturday afternoon and we'd watch horror movies.
Now, if something breaks, it’s cheaper to buy a new one than it is to find a man to fix the old one.
I remember those vacuum tube testers in stores: If it was bad you could buy a new one from the cabinet underneath the testing device.
I had a hand-me-down portable tube tester as a kid. It was about the size of a laptop computer.
-Mr EntryReqrd
Yes, Dad taking all the tubes out for a trip to the store. I don't remember, though, if the cabinet below was locked. Maybe I shop in the wrong store, but so much is in locked cabinets: detergent & bleach; eye drops; skin lotions and,of course, alcoholic beverages.
So many memories with this video. I would ride in the Milk Man's delivery truck as he made the rounds to the other houses on our ranch. It was Borden Milk. He would give me an ice cream sandwich when we came back to the main gate where our house was. I also worked with a bee keeper who maintained hives on our ranch. Chopped and picked cotton, picked citrus and grapes. Played all day in the orchards and swam in the ditches in the summer. Simpler times, slower life.
I remember very well, especially in elementary school, what a treat it was when they showed us a film with a projector. The problem was that I always fell asleep. The darkened room and whirring of the projector were just very relaxing.
You know you're getting old when the stuff you grew up with is in a museum.
or you see the toys you played with are in antique stores.
@@daghlren Or you seeing the Beatles' "Abbey Road" album cover on a children's bookbag in Walmart. That was equivalent to seeing a sheet music cover from 1912 when I was that age!
Or when the hits you remember growing up are "elevator music"
We did not have a recycling problem back then. We Reused everything and then reused it again. Even food scraps went into the garden. There was very little that actually wound up in the trash at all. Those obsolete milk bottles were never a problem that needed recycling unless they were broken.
24:37 you still need them for digital over the air TV if you're in an area with marginal reception. The VHF-low antennas (the ones with elements about 2m wide) aren't used anymore, but VHF-High and UHF definitely are.
Furthermore, a satellite dish is also just another form of roof mounted antenna.
Yep, outdoor antenna sales are up. The cheap "in the window" junk should be avoided. With a good outdoor antenna most metro areas have ~ 80 to 90 channels available.
Yeah, and what the heck is a “Digital” antenna
Except for the TV tester unit, I remember all the thinks listed, most of which I or my wife have used. We still have a number of those items shown in this video. I remember things going back to the late 1940s when I was very young. My mother bought our 1st TV in 1953. It had a 12" screen. My mother had a foot-petal driven sewing machine. I remember the milkman delivering bottled milk and the coal man delivery coal. I also remember the ice man delivering ice for the refrigerator. There was also a man who had a large wagon pulled by a horse. We called him the "rag man. He would come by once or twice a month yelling, "Rags, paper, rags". Finally, I remember cars that were started with hand cranks.
Thanks for sharing @DrinkingStar. I remember all of it with the exception of the ice man, milk man and the coal man. As a young boy living in eastern Canada, which has really cold winters, heating was a must. Instead of coal, I can remember an oil truck with a reel at its back containing a long black hose with an nozel at it's end. The delivery person would pull out the hose and stretch it along the side of our home to reach a capped oil pipe. He would then unlock the cap and proceed to fill the tank that fueled the heater system in the basement. Old memories has this video brought back to mind.
@@SWExplore Thanks for leaving the comment. I see in your home page there were a number of videos of beaches. I've been to the beach in Santa Cruz in California. I went to California to compete in the 1985 Masters America Bodybuilding Competition. I have spent my life looking for the perfect beach. You might like some of my beach videos on RUclips
We had milk BOXES by the back door., The milkman would drive up to the back door, remove empty milk bottles from the box, and put the standing order for milk in the insulated box.
We also had a man come up the driveway with bread, a standing order. He tried to sell us tins of potato chips and pretzels, but didn't get a sale very often.
And, yes, we had ice trays, of course.
We had a milk box on the front porch and the milk bottles had paper caps. At times during the winter the non homogenized milk would freeze and you would find the frozen cream standing over an inch out of the bottle neck with the cap sitting on top.
We had silver foil tops on our bottles and it was quite common, especially in the winter months to find a large hole in the foil top made by starlings and the like, stealing the fat rich cream off the milk. We had to throw the rest away.🤬
The house I had until about ten years ago still had a little door next to the front door. It had a door inside, too. The milkman would make his deliveries by putting the fresh bottles inside the little cubbyhole, and when the bottles were empty you'd put them in there for him to collect.
The house also had a coal chute - though the door had been bolted shut by one of the previous owners. Yup, for coal deliveries from the days when the house had a coal-fired furnace. At some point the house had been 'upgraded' to an oil furnace, and in the 1970s to gas.
It sounds like this house was ancient, doesn't it? It was actually surprisingly 'modern' - built in 1948, when Toledo was expanding into the rural areas surrounding it.
@@Gary-Seven-and-Isis-in-1968 We had the same every winter. Milk was never thrown away. Used to drink water from the river as well. I remember tasting a worm.
Back then we had to memorize important phone numbers. There was no 911, we had to dial the number to police, sheriff, fire department or hospital. Pay phones were everywhere and it was common for one to ask stranger for a dime or later a quarter for pay phone.
Cell phones were out in the 70s but only in big cities.
Also police and Fire numbers were on the inside cover of the phone books to make them more accessible.
I still remember the easy to remember fire department number for our area from the 1950's: 55555.
Phone books!
And there was also a number to call to get the correct time.
Typing on the old manual Royal typewriters was HARD. I used a manual typewriter through high school, then was able to switch up to an electric.
learning to type on a manual is why I now regularly beak keyboards.
I used those computer punched cards in 1976-1980.
I still have one stack of the cards with my favourite computer program on the cards.
Nostalgia - the great trash retainer! :-))
“DO NOT FOLD, SPINDLE or MUTILATE.” Remember when your U.S. Treasury checks were printed on a punch card?
What do you suppose it means to “spindle” something?
In olden days a spindle was a sharp pin on a weighted metal base used to gather various notes and documents into one stack.
@@briangriffin4937No, but I remember Savings Bonds were on punch cards…
@@samiam619I just found two $25. punch card U.S. Savings Bonds I bought with my Savings Stamps in 6th grade back in the ‘60s 😊 Worth about $200. today.
I still have my grandfather's Kodak Carousel slide projector. I still have many, many slides.
In high school, I used a slide rule in advanced trig. Saved up my money to purchase a four function calculator. It ran on three 'AA' batteries and was the size of a paperback book. 3 months later a 6 function, credit card sized one was being given away as a promotion at one of the local car dealers, it ran on solar power.
The reel to reel tape machines made by companies such as Studer Revox, Otari, Pioneer, Nagra, Sony, Ampex, Byer, Teac, and others, still are the gold standard for audio reproduction.
Yes, but this one at 3:37 was the Grundig TK24 made in Fürth, Germany. I remember this one, I did have a different brand, but a friend had it. I still have my Tandberg 10 XD.
@@McGhinch We had the Grundig. Loved that thing.
for me, I would consider that barometer as a piece of art, not an equipment...
they're look beautiful...
😍❤️
Even though only a decade or two away from the 1970s and 80s; alot of stuff from the 1960s feel so old. Though milk bottles and typewriters are debatable.
Milk in glass bottles is still a thing.
For security reasons, there are government agencies around the world that use typewriters.
7:05 - Wrong! EVERY typewriter ever made had a BACKSPACE key!
and most of the last ones made had a correction key that you pressed down then retyped the letter to erase what you mistyped or you just use wight out.
Thank you for all these memories ❤.
I had, or even still have, pretty much all of those things. It is easier to list the things I didn't (or don't) have. I think there is only one; the vacuum tube tester. I never had one of those, but everything else, from party line telephone service and home milk delivery to a slide rule and cathode ray TV (both of which I STILL have), I had.
I was born in January 1963 and can still remember walking with my older brother down to the local 7-11 convenience store in Ft. Lauderdale, must have been 1967 or 68, to test tubes from our tv on the tube tester the store had. Simpler times then.
Hand cranked record players were not really a thing in the 1960s - they vanished mostly in the 1930s. There were certainly 'portable' players, but most of them still needed to be plugged into a wall outlet. 'Portable' only meant that you could carry it easily from room to room, or maybe out to the porch or patio. There were battery-operated record players as well, but they were usually fairly small units.
And, record players are not realy 'obsolete'. A bit outdated, perhaps, but there is still a significant industry making and selling record players, everything from a sub $100 portabls (Can you say 'Crosley' and 'Victrola'? I knew you could...!) on up to precision unis costing thousands.
White out which still exists today was literally one of the end-all and beals for clearing out mistakes made by your typewriter it was a liquid substance with a little brush and some of them were not even liquid some of them had a little paper that you would put and then you would type over the letters that you made a mistake with and it would clear them away I mean as much as those things did which was to turn them white to make a long story short here that has existed and it still exists the white out.
I have YET to come across any phone or tablet with an alarm loud enough to wake me. The "good ole" Baby Ben is my fave.
A lot of the items and most of pictures/videos look much more "1950's" to this man who was born in the late 1950's and grew up in the 1960's. The clothes, hair, cars and much more look 50's all they way.
@dahsuerk, I'm waiting to see the channel owner answer your comment.
Party lines were more 50's than 60's
@cindykaeding9196 I remember my Grandmother lived in Arkansas in 1968 and she had a Party Line.
Every time she went to make a call her cousin was yakking away on the line😂🤣😅
True. Lots of the things shown here are from the 1930s to 1950s.
@JamesDavidWalley Notice not a word from the channel owner responding to these comments?
Click bait!
I remember my dad bringing home a tape recorder in the sixties. We were absolutely amazed to playback our voices.
My freshman year of college, 1978, we were the first class that didn't have to use punch cards to program the computer. We had teletypes and CRT terminals to communicate with the mainframe. However we had to wait for most of our results to be printed out by a line printer and picked up from the cumputet center. We played with the card punchers and woud punch our first mame into to card so you could read it when you held it up to the light. Mine would read BILL.
FORTRAN was the first language I was taught along with the updated FORTRAN77 in college.
Reel 2 Reel is still very much alive among audiophiles
Reel-to-reel tape machines are less popular than turntables, even among audiophiles. This is not due to the cost of the machines but rather the availability of new reels.
Reel to Reel tapes still have the best audio quality and still some use it today.
Reel to Reel is okay, but only if you can put up with the hiss.
Hi quality low noise tape, higher taoe speeds, and Dolby and dbx noise reduction systems all but eliminated tape hiss ....both in R to R tapes and cassettes!
@SWExplore a properly maintained and calibrated QUALITY reel to reel machine, is a far superior audio device.
@@kellyswoodyardIf you say so. I guess you’re fine with dynamic range of 60db.
Wrong.
A friend’s mother worked with computer punch cards and sometimes would bring a bag of the discarded punches for us to use as confetti. It was the BEST!
I remember coming home to the flashing red light on the answering machine
That drum device was not a card reader. It was a control card for the keypunch machine which allowed tabbing and duplication to occur automatically,
Nice video, thanks. I’d like to add that Philips introduced the C-cassette in 1963 and I had Philips C-cassette player in my (dad’’s) car in 1970 here in Finland. And I always had girls in my car as I played Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix and CCR as loud as possible. 😁
I remember when Dad brought home a reel-to-reel tape recorder back in the 59s.
At 0:22, my mom was taking pictures in the '40,s, '50s, and '60s with the Ansco version of that Kodak Brownie camera.
You underestimate the power of the sliderule. It calculated sines, cosines, powers of X and many more. It could not find the decimal point. This meant that the person using a sliderule had to have some idea of what the answer should be
Yep, the slide rule more-or-less forced you to pay at least some attention to what you were doing. With the advent of calculators, it became very easy simply to punch in the numbers and read the result. It was also very easy to be off by a factor of ten, one hundred, a thousand or more. You learned the hard way.
Vacuum tubes are not completely obsolete. The giant amplifiers used by rock bands still have them. They sound better when overdriven than transistors. TV antennas are not obsolete either. In rural areas, outside antennas are used to receive broadcast digital television. Sometimes they are used in non-rural areas to pick up more stations.
T
The coolest thing about vacuum tubes was that people repaired their own TVs (or got their husbands to do it), and electronics stores had tube testers for customers to test their own tubes.
Some areas had the testers in supermarkets and drugstores, too. Went to the Thrifty Drugstore many times with Dad to hold the cigar box of tubes. Couple of times we got ice cream cones.
My grandmother, who had worked for Philco, was our handyman and TV repairman. She was very good at pulling the chassis out of the television cabinet, testing voltages and tubes, and fixing the set. She also did all the household fix-its, as well as all the painting in the house. Incredible woman. Having lived through the Depression, she was the original recycler. Everything has a worth, and we saved things that could be re-used. She could squeeze 12 cents out of every dime. And she could break down the trash to the point where our trash for the week (for a family of 6) fit in a brown paper grocery bag, with the top folded over and taped with brown kraft paper tape.
I installed a TV antenna in June 2024. My sister decided to go full-streaming at her apartment, where she had WiFi but no free cable.
To get local, over-the-air channels she had to have an antenna to pick up the broadcast signal.
The antenna, purchased at Best Buy, was just a plastic doohickey that we installed behind the TV.
So, not a rooftop antenna, but if I hadn't remembered the antennae from my youth, I wouldn't have known to install a similar device in her home.
Her son couldn't conceive of an "antenna". He just couldn't wrap his brain around it.
@@cmccloskey56 "Rabbit ears"😅😆🤣
I still have my Mom’s Brownie camera and my Dad’s instamatic. They sit on top of my bookcase in my kitchen that holds my cookbooks.
We still get a phone book.
I used to have the metal ice tray but it was aluminium, not stainless steel, and sadly broke. I still have a super 8 and regular 8mm projector and slide projector, and even an old Imperial typewriter! In the UK many people still have a TV antenna/aerial as well as possible access to cable/satellite/streaming Internet services. I also still have two barometers, though I must admit I rarely look at them. Milk in glass bottles still prevails in some parts of the UK as does the milkman. Still have a couple of slide rules but have long forgotton how to use them :-( And the fact that vehicles no longer have an ashtray and cigar/ciaretter lighter is - I am sure - an annoyance to many smokers. Several obsolete things not mentioned such as 5.25" and the smaller 3.5" floppy discs, 8 track players, rotary dial phones - still have one but no longer connected to a land line. Can you imagine having to dial an 11 digit number on one? As for telephone books they were useful as was Yellow Pages. Internet search services don't always provide what one maybe looking for and Directory Inquiry services can cost anything between £4.44 and £16.00 and even more if you want to be connected.
I remember absolutely loving a certain typewriter that came out in the 80s it was a newfangled when it had a little screen in front so that before you press the return button you could check to make sure that you hadn't misspelled anything so that way that it was correct before it would be printed out by the machine with its little ball in the middle.
Ah - the slide rule! Y husband is a retired aerospace Engineer (Purdue 1972) who used a slide rule which he still has somewhere. I recently asked him if he remembers how to use it and he admitted that he didn’t have a clue - he probably hadn’t used it in over 40-45 yesrs! He bought a brand new TI (Texas Instrument) hand calculator in 1972 for close to $300 - we may still have that! I learned and quickly forgot - think I slammed it in the door of my HS locker and broke it😧
One of my parents friends would make Christmas wreath decorations out of IBM cards.
I remember in my Junior year we had to take a "computer class" which the teacher started the class with, " this is already out dated and not used any more but we have to teach a computer class so here is how you punch cards to program a computer." He proceeded to teach us punch cards. One and only time I ever saw one. lol
That is funny! I can remember seeing my parent's phone bill, or some bill, and seeing the punch card that had to be returned along with your cheque. Lots of stuff has happened since I was born in the mid-50s.
Plastic was not a ice tray improvement. In fact it was the opposite. I grew up with plastic ice trays, and most of the time it wasn't as easy to get the ice out, as the 1s in this video. Another issue was durability. It's common after enough years and decades of use, the plastic 1s break or crack.
And released micro plastic into our diets before we knew what that was.
@@scarlettjoehandsome6130 Yeah Dupont killing us w/ Teflon, a toxin & carcinogen.
Sorry, but those Ice cube trays were not steel. They were Aluminum. I did see a stainless version there, but the masses had Aluminum. I guess the rich folk had the stainless, because in the 60s stainless was expensive. These days stainless is used widely and relatively cheap.
Well put together and presented.
We had a party line and, yes, listened in on conversations when bored.
I remember party lines, too. When visiting my elderly grandmother who lived in Côte Ste Paul, Montreal, I remember picking up the heavy black handset in a bedroom and hearing some man or woman going on about their daily lives. I also found it funny and can even remember the other speaker recognizing the 'click' when someone would pick up, and tell me to hang up right away...LOL
@@SWExplore yes we had the party lines too I even had a boyfriend that had a party line and somebody used to listen while we talked and he used to tell them to get off the phone hahaha.
21:08 - I have that Clock Radio!! An Identical unit, I mean!! I just wanted one for a spare bedroom!
Got it at the Goodwill for $1.99 !!!!
Vacuum tubes are not completely obsolete. There are a few applications that require them still. Great viddy! Peace!
Yup, like the Rogue amplifier I bought new a few years ago.
Digital, and even analog alarm clocks are still very much present.
Hey some of these items are making a coming back. Like tube audio amplifier, turn table and vinyle disk and even tape recording is also making a comeback.
The ice cube trays were not stainless steel but rather aluminium as you showed in the video. I remember using all those items, including the party line phone, the slide-rule, and manual typewriter.
My 2011 Silverado still has an honest ashtray. It's never been used, but it is still there.
I was born in 1979 & my parents got the 1st camcorder we had in 1989. I taught myself how to use it. But what I was gonna say is my family never had reel-to-reel tape. Our home recordings were on VHS.
Dad was an engineer with Altec Lansing. He showed me how to use a slide rule when I was in elementary school. Mom was a data punch operator at Autonetics. I still have the punch card Christmas wreath she made!
We had a party line and b&w tv. It was around 1970 when we got a color tv. The slide rule was common.
I was gifted an IBM portable electronic calculator in 1975. I remember it's display had bright red numbers. It used 4 AA batteries and also had a plug in adapter.
I remember a lot of these. Luckily and if you have deep pockets, you can still get manual typewriters (I still have one - I find tapping on the keys therapeutic) and portable record players. Vinyl records are now collectibles, back when the album case was an art form. Many of these items from the past were a lot more eco-friendly, than today's plastic world. Back then, you paid to get things fixed, now they are so cheaply produced, that buying a new one is cheaper than fixing an old one. Again, things were far more eco-friendly in those old days. Sadly, cheap goods and cheap manufacturing have taken over. Many jobs were lost too, such as milkman jobs, etc. I appreciate some improvements that focused on safety guidelines, etc. Us folk over the age of 60, fondly remember those days, as simpler and more peaceful times, when family values mattered. Thanks for the memories.
We didn't use reel-to-reel, but I have both an 8mm and 16mm projectors for looking through my grandfather's films.
The old Hollerith Cards. Loved them!
The slide rule was used thfwhen calculating the path to the moon.
I also remember the transparencies that were made by taking Xerox of the documents. These were then use with light projectors to make presentation. Transparencies need to be changed manually like we change slides on the laptop presentation nowadays
2:17 i doubt addition and multiplication were done much by slide rule. Those things are as fast and more accurate if done on paper or in your head. Slide rules - i think - were much more useful for trigonometry and such, things that you would otherwise need a book of sin/cos/tan tables for.
Good to know, so thanks. That's coming from someone who has never used a slide rule and lived through the 50s and 60s.
Slide rules don't add!
Vacuum tubes are still utilized in high-end sound systems today.
Really? I was so surprised to read how vacuum tubes are still used today. Like, Wow!!
@@SWExplore If you would like, I would be happy to share some links to contemporary tube amplifiers. However, if you prefer to conduct your own search, that is completely fine as well.
It's for the soft clipping, i.e. the way it follows the analog wave form. There was an old joke about using a high power class A amplifier heat your room.
I was in college during the transition from slide rules to calculators. My freshman year, calculators were banned from exams in chemistry and physics. By the time I was a senior, I had a class (numerical methods) where a calculator was required.
In Edmonton, Alberta, you can still get phone books, but you have to order them; they're no longer delivered automatically. I've found the white pages to be more current than the online directory. There's also a dairy in Edmonton that still sells milk in glass bottles.
In 1954-58 my high school speech class used a reel-ro-reel tape recorder. In 1959, I remember a man walking into an office in a cloud of music. He had a transistor radio in his pocket. Automatic correction was possible in the 1960s electric typewriter. It backspaced and used white-out in the ribbon to redo the typo.
Who remembers vacuum tube testers being in drug stores?
While that was before I was born, if I had asked my late father about that he would probably have joked that he rode on the back of a dinosaur to get to the drug store. 😂 Lol
Unfortunately, that older generation is dying of old age. RIP 🪦
In the 1950's movie, "The Invisible Boy", there's a scene where some military officers want a super computer to analyse a problem. The operator agrees so they open their briefcase an hand him a dog-eared punch card. From that one card, 80 characters, the super computer solves the complex problem.
We had a party line, and I used a slide rule in my school maths exams in the early 70s. When I started work, there was only one computer in our company, and it used punch cards. My mother got a washing machine that used punch cards. You fed in a different card for each programme, (eg hot wash, cold wash, fast spin, slow spin etc). I learned to type on a manual computer, using carbon paper if you wanted several copies, because there were no photocopiers.
Damn, how my parents hated having a party line! My dad was on emergency standby and finally his company agreed to pay for a private line. When I retired in 2001 they made a big deal at my retirement party over some of my records being on punch cards. My younger co-workers had no idea how they were used! My father refused to buy a color TV until he said, they perfected them. After I had moved out and got married my parents finally bought a RCA color TV. It spent more time in the repair shop then it did in their living room! My first radio was an amplified transistor model I built in shop class, I still have it and it still works!
Excellent video!!!!!!
Manual typewriters really worked the muscles in your fingers.
Especially the pinkies - those p's and q's
There are no muscles in your fingers. They work by movement of tendons & ligaments.
@@Woodman-Spare-that-tree Only muscles can move things: tendons and ligaments hold things in place.
Thank you. Now I feel like I should be in a museum. Lol
I used the punch cards in the Marines back in the early 80's. We used to call them ID10T cards.
I remember that phone book ad, and of course The Terminator, as well.
7:29 So wait...is this the keyboard of the future? Because I ain't ready for that.
There was 8 ways to load the slides into the carousel and only one of them was correct. People would often put a mark in the exposed corner once you got it right so that you can quickly load it correctly next time. Slide film produced much better quality than prints from negatives--especially with Kodak Kodachrome.
The vacuum tube testers that were shown were used by repair technicians etc., they failed to show the ever common tube testers that were found in a lot of drugstores etc. at the time where a homeowner could test their own tubes.
There are modern-day, portable phonograph players mass-produced by RCA Victor are available in abundant supply at Wally's Assmart nationwide.
Plenty of things to remember here and a few surprises, like the ultrasound record cleaner. My ultrasound destroys some plastics,
I guess it must be different somehow.🤷🏼♂
Some areas still have a morning milk round, but it surely is struggling to survive within the modern environment.
21:17 I still use a stand-alone digital alarm clock. It is one of three clocks that I set to wake me up. The other two are my cellphone and my smartwatch.
We still have a CRT TV - and don’t know why!!! The thing weights a ton and just sits in the corner of my husband’s home office and collects dust!
I still have my mom's Smith-Corona typewriter.
The last time I used it was about thee years ago in oeder to fill a security form for work
and that was because the forms were not formated for direct completion.
I even had to repaire it before using it.
I still have my wood grain digital alarm and use it.
My first semester in College was the last time that a slide-rule course was offered. Desktop calculators were permitted in most courses by that time. Can you guess how old I am?
I don't know if it is because I am getting older but I remember many of these technologies. 😇
Took me back. I used at least 90% of the items depicted. Don't seem to miss them though...
My 2004 Infiniti G35c with a cassette player and 6 disc CD changer had an ashtray and lighter. The 2001 Acura CL-S I had before was available with the "smokers package" but mine was a velvet lined compartment.
It's interesting how that works. Americans either smoke or they don't. A lot of Europeans smoke socially. Smoking is popular in Asia.
I agree more late 50s…but great memories!
CDs were the center gem for a while. Streaming and down-loading music is very common in 2024. Today new vinyl records out sell new CDs. In 2023, 43 million records sold and only 37 million CDs sold in USA. New and used vinyls sell at 'premium' prices. Record players new and used are still popular. Record cleaning equipment, from basic to advanced, is still selling well even though it is an outdated technology. Want and need are separate realities.