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Talking Clocks of the 1980s

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  • Опубликовано: 4 апр 2022
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Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @geekyprojects1353
    @geekyprojects1353 2 года назад +2553

    35 years later David still enjoys his watch saying "f*ck it". Some things never get old.

    • @stu729
      @stu729 2 года назад +172

      This is how we stay young, laughing at the things that are timelessly funny.

    • @AveryHappens
      @AveryHappens 2 года назад +78

      This is the best thing a watch can say

    • @CoreDreamStudios
      @CoreDreamStudios 2 года назад +46

      @@AveryHappens calculators could do stuff too if you did 800813 and turned it upside down lol.

    • @MisfitOutfit
      @MisfitOutfit 2 года назад +32

      @@CoreDreamStudios there was once a lady that had 69 babies, that was 222 many babies so she went to 51st street to see doctor x who gave her 8 pills and she came out 55378008 (6922251x8=55378008)

    • @Di3mondDud3
      @Di3mondDud3 2 года назад +19

      @@CoreDreamStudios EIBOOB? Maybe rethink the order xD

  • @Grayfox988
    @Grayfox988 2 года назад +441

    Talking watches still exist, for the blind. Technology evolved in a way that they now have enough memory to have enough phrases pre-recorded, instead of voice-synthesizing.

    • @fuijika
      @fuijika 2 года назад +35

      But do they say f*** it too? Lol

    • @Gladuos1
      @Gladuos1 2 года назад +9

      @@fuijika Bet they could lol

    • @fawkesrocks
      @fawkesrocks 2 года назад +22

      Yep. My dad is fully blind and he had that RadioShack box when it was new. Fascinating how things have evolved from that to now we use VoiceOver for Apple Watch

    • @AiOinc1
      @AiOinc1 2 года назад +8

      and what a shame that is, voice synth cooler

    • @Purdey921
      @Purdey921 2 года назад +11

      @@fawkesrocks I have a Braille Note that had speech synthesis and a friend had me Braille naughty words to see how it said them.

  • @randomschittz9461
    @randomschittz9461 Год назад +49

    When he made the watch say “F$&k it”, I giggled like I was twelve again, and then looked around to make sure my mom didn’t hear it... from three states away.😆

    • @squidiskool
      @squidiskool Год назад

      @Dale The Elad you have to cool

  • @Sparkette
    @Sparkette 2 года назад +676

    Pro tip: if you live an apartment, you can use anything loud enough as a talking clock, at least in the middle of the night. If you make enough noise, you'll inevitably hear a voice telling you the time before long.

    • @franciscopina2899
      @franciscopina2899 2 года назад +17

      LMAO! 🤣

    • @YeOldeGeezer
      @YeOldeGeezer 2 года назад +11

      Even that spirit that walks around in my small kitchen?? 😂😂

    • @leuri397
      @leuri397 Год назад +60

      It is literally an old anecdote:
      One guy showing his apartment to another and guest notices large copper bowl on a wall. He asks:
      - What is that?
      - It's a talking clock. Let me show.
      He bangs bowl loudly and somebody screams from behind the wall:
      - IT IS 2 FUCKING AM

    • @Sparkette
      @Sparkette Год назад +4

      @@leuri397 Yup, that's what I was referencing!

    • @wasd____
      @wasd____ Год назад +6

      Do it often enough, and you might even get a very helpful letter informing you of how much time you have left before you have to move out. Really useful for figuring out when you have to start house-hunting again. Convenience all around!

  • @Lim95
    @Lim95 2 года назад +632

    Dude made a watch swear, absolute legend

    • @MIW_Renegade
      @MIW_Renegade 2 года назад +15

      I came to the comments the second I heard that knowing people would say this

    • @shuheihisagi7514
      @shuheihisagi7514 2 года назад +4

      Yooo I'm the 200th like! Fuck yea

    • @curtisscott9251
      @curtisscott9251 2 года назад +4

      Bart Simpson was totally giving both thumbs up about this!

    • @EnchantedSmellyWolf
      @EnchantedSmellyWolf 2 года назад +12

      14:11

    • @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741
      @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741 2 года назад

      Repent to Jesus Christ
      “The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”
      ‭‭John‬ ‭1:29‬ ‭NIV‬‬

  • @benjamineldridge769
    @benjamineldridge769 2 года назад +280

    Being totally blind, I have owned several of these products over the years. Thanks for the trip down memory lane. It was fun. :-)

    • @TheSliderW
      @TheSliderW 2 года назад +41

      I once woeked with a blind web developper, and he was probably better at the job than many i met over the years. It was always wzird walking into the open space and seeing him typing in front of black screens and later that day get to review his code on our gitlab... Just wow ! :)

    • @benjamineldridge769
      @benjamineldridge769 2 года назад +38

      That’s cool. That’s what I do for a living myself. Software and web development.

    • @clonkex
      @clonkex 2 года назад +14

      @@benjamineldridge769 What. Aside from the fact that that relieves one of my greatest fears (losing my eyesight to some accident and then being unable to actually do anything, in particular programming).... HOW. How on earth do you do programming if you're blind??

    • @cmpvariety1764
      @cmpvariety1764 2 года назад +2

      The talking watches from radio shack always seem to last longer than the specialty ones though. Although, the talking watches from radio shack looked kind of funny but still, the band always seem to wear out before the watch did.

    • @WeebJail
      @WeebJail 2 года назад +4

      @@benjamineldridge769 uh what the fuck, THAT'S seriously impressive, do tell us more

  • @verdatum
    @verdatum 2 года назад +396

    In the early 90s when watches were cheap, we'd all sync them to the second with the electronic school bell system, then turn on the hour chime, so we'd all sound off at once, and we thought that was cute. But then, one of us got the idea of getting every kid to offset by exactly one second and turn on the hour chime, resulting in a different watch beeping for about 20 seconds. Oh boy did that upset the teachers. The principal prohibited the hour chime school-wide really quick. (The ADHD kids like me were still allowed to use the alarm to remember to go to the nurse to get their meds, heh.)

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam 2 года назад +18

      Lol we did that too back in the 80's.
      We even had the rich kid who had the channel changer watch & could turn the TV off/on during a movie multiple times lol.
      That watch was pretty damn crazy for it's time.

    • @Stupid_you_so_stoopid_UHF
      @Stupid_you_so_stoopid_UHF 2 года назад +3

      We use to slam our tops of our desks in sync. 😆

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 2 года назад +5

      In my primary school I remember various densities of hourly beeps happening spread across about 5 minutes, a couple before and a couple after the actual hour.

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz 2 года назад +1

      90s? Hell, even in the early 80s digital watches were dirt cheap.

    • @verdatum
      @verdatum 2 года назад +5

      @@tarstarkusz This is true, but, in 1989, I was only in the 2nd grade.

  • @weirdproq
    @weirdproq 2 года назад +148

    I love the design of that pyramid clock. I can imagine it on the desk of a business man in one of those late 80's business buildings that have a metallic look, like the one in Gremlins 2 or the one in Who's Harry Crumb.

    • @ransom182
      @ransom182 2 года назад

      Or on tables in Ten Forward in the 24th century?

  • @anotheruser9876
    @anotheruser9876 2 года назад +292

    This must be LGR's favourite episode with all the wood grain.

  • @retropuffer2986
    @retropuffer2986 2 года назад +80

    In the 80s my friends and I would set our watches one second apart and sit next to each other. When the hourly beep would happen it sounded like the beep was moving along the row. 😁

    • @sharonbraselton4302
      @sharonbraselton4302 2 года назад

      back too futré dyd that furßt time travel exiebt

    • @Rocky_Jones
      @Rocky_Jones 2 года назад +2

      Hey it's mr Brian. I remember when we did that. I always fucked up the time and my beep would disrupt the chain and you guys would always beat me up for that. Good times.

  • @48mastadon
    @48mastadon 2 года назад +36

    I used to work at Radio Shack back in the 80s and they had a lot of cool shit. This was when they had those cell phones with the giant battery case that you had to carry like a suitcase. Ah...Good times.

  • @OmegaHellHound543
    @OmegaHellHound543 2 года назад +46

    RadioShack was amazing. They literally made some of the best stuff for the price, and it’s all built to last. Some of it is near indestructible

    • @MacTechG4
      @MacTechG4 2 года назад

      I have an original Radio Shack “Illuma-Storm” plasma globe, still works flawlessly, as well as a newer “Lightning Storm” both solid state Tesla coils.
      ruclips.net/video/GtdBnCspdcs/видео.html

    • @rommix0
      @rommix0 2 года назад +3

      I miss that place. It was so easy getting components there and that Electronics Learning Lab kit is a classic.

  • @huntereddy4014
    @huntereddy4014 2 года назад +144

    The pyramid clock looks like it would fit in perfectly on the desk of some evil mastermind or super villain at the top of the tallest and most menacing skyscraper in the city

    • @-DeScruff
      @-DeScruff 2 года назад +18

      To me it screams Robocop. Like you can just picture it being on the desk of Dick Jones the president of Omni Consumer Products.

    • @mikekz4489
      @mikekz4489 2 года назад +3

      @@-DeScruff Yeah, would’ve been good set dressing.

    • @MuhammadIlhamuodd254512
      @MuhammadIlhamuodd254512 2 года назад +1

      I smell Bill Cypher

    • @keithmichael112
      @keithmichael112 2 года назад

      ozymandias would def have one

    • @Wtfinc
      @Wtfinc 2 года назад +3

      it also has exotic accent apparently, which i couldn't pick out the accent. needed more examples. smh.

  • @perochialjoe
    @perochialjoe 2 года назад +245

    It was fun hearing the discoveries of 11 year old 8-bit guy

    • @BilalKhan_-bj4bu
      @BilalKhan_-bj4bu 2 года назад

      Tujh se kisi ne poocha

    • @techtriggr
      @techtriggr 2 года назад +3

      true lol it's so funny

    • @jamesmanson2152
      @jamesmanson2152 2 года назад

      @@BilalKhan_-bj4bu Kub gabu lumor 😂😂

    • @kwas101
      @kwas101 2 года назад +3

      And all that hair that he had!

    • @OMA2k
      @OMA2k 2 года назад

      It's fu... It's fu... It's fu... :o)

  • @ShortStorytime
    @ShortStorytime 2 года назад +17

    @14:40 *Watch gets wet from the pool*
    *FUCK IT FUCK IT FUCK IT*!

  • @robbruce2128
    @robbruce2128 2 года назад +28

    I had a talking watch in the 80s that was branded "Omni," but clearly had the same guts as the Radio Shack one. The alarm started with same chime, and its voice was the same, but instead of the Bach Minuet it played the *Boccherini* Minuet, which was liltingly charming. It was a lot more fragile that that RS one appeared, so it lived in its included desktop stand instead of on my wrist.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 Год назад +1

      Or, rather, a minuet tune arranged into 4 time and altered a bit.

    • @lianrobintribunal484
      @lianrobintribunal484 8 месяцев назад

      Menuet was not created by Johann Sebastian Bach, It was made by Bach Petzold

  • @falchionofeternity433
    @falchionofeternity433 2 года назад +294

    The fact that a 40-year-old clock still works after being left in packaging for all that time speaks to the engineering that went into it.
    Amazing!

    • @TheBullDurham
      @TheBullDurham 2 года назад +31

      Planned obsolescence was not in full effect yet when it was made.

    • @achannelhasnoname5182
      @achannelhasnoname5182 2 года назад +22

      @@TheBullDurham actually it was, it started 1924..

    • @swordblaster2596
      @swordblaster2596 2 года назад +8

      And the robust simplicity of the design. It does one, basically useless process, not very well.

    • @mfx1
      @mfx1 2 года назад +20

      Nearer 20 years and it's not really engineering it's just very simple without much to go wrong apart from electrolytics drying out and that can happen however well you engineer something. Modern equipment is often more highly stressed running at higher current /temperature levels.

    • @mfx1
      @mfx1 2 года назад +2

      @@achannelhasnoname5182 The light bulb cartel .

  • @JordanOrlando
    @JordanOrlando 2 года назад +60

    I had the Seiko pyramid one! It was a gift from my step-grandmother (who specialized in awful gifts). It took so long that I had to resist just picking it up to see the time.

  • @LickLland
    @LickLland 2 года назад +16

    I watch these when I go to sleep simply for the fact it’s so interesting that my brain can keep listening and because his style of recording is so comfy

    • @spingleboygle
      @spingleboygle Год назад +2

      i agree, but just wait til you wake up to him making the alarm clock say “f you” XD

  • @cwa107
    @cwa107 2 года назад +17

    What a blast from the past! My mom had the "Micronta" alarm clock from the Radio Shack ad for many, many years. The voice was identical to the TI-driven alarm clock you demoed first. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

  • @MrArgus11111
    @MrArgus11111 2 года назад +12

    was REALLY racking my brain for a second about why the Mattel clock needed spark plugs...

  • @asteroidrules
    @asteroidrules 2 года назад +159

    That Spartus clock was an absolute work of art, a fantastic blend of rather tacky aesthetic design and built like a tank functional design.

    • @edgarwalk5637
      @edgarwalk5637 2 года назад +9

      And the loveliest alarm sound.

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 2 года назад +6

      You don't see that much in consumer products these days. Companies unfortunately learned that most people like cheap products so there was a "race to the bottom" in terms of pricing. To get there companies cut corners and reliability and longevity suffered. This also means that when the product that you bought finally breaks after a few months or years you gotta go back to the store and buy another one. Meanwhile the people who owned the company that made your crappy product are laughing their way all the way to the bank to cash the check you wrote them.
      An unfortunate aspect of modern capitalism.

    • @boltar2003
      @boltar2003 2 года назад

      The capacitors looked like theyd started to leak. Will die soon if he doesnt replace them.

    • @MR5er1
      @MR5er1 2 года назад

      @@edgarwalk5637 I know is sound amazing! I would like to either find one or at least get an mp3 recording and use it as an alarm on my phone

    • @AaronOfMpls
      @AaronOfMpls 2 года назад +4

      @@twistedyogert There's a bit of survivor bias in there too, as there's poorly-made cheap crap in _every_ era.

  • @Scodiddly
    @Scodiddly 2 года назад +98

    You can just hear the pain in David's voice when he talks about the yellowed plastic cover on that first digital clock. Retrobrite video coming?

    • @great__success
      @great__success 2 года назад +3

      I wonder if retrobrite would work on this type of plastic as well

    • @fluxoff
      @fluxoff 2 года назад +1

      Don't think he'll bother.

    • @ralphrestubog5519
      @ralphrestubog5519 2 года назад

      @@great__success I tried and it doesn't.

    • @Connie_TinuityError
      @Connie_TinuityError Год назад

      @@ralphrestubog5519 Wait, YOU ACTUALLY TRIED?! LMAO

  • @CreachterZ
    @CreachterZ 2 года назад +1

    My dad was blind, so we had quite a few of these in our house. Very cool. I remember that Vox Watch so well. We were a Radio Shack family!

  • @Bellonging
    @Bellonging 2 года назад +179

    I love how the little Vox Watch says "attention please" with it's alarm. So cute!
    I like talking clocks, they're practical. I was sick recently and moving my head constantly to see my clock was making me dizzy, but my phone has the google assistant so I could just ask and get the time. Unfortunately the Google assistant is a poorly designed mess of an interface so it's less useful then some of these clocks were haha, even if you had to press the button for the clocks.

    • @DanknDerpyGamer
      @DanknDerpyGamer 2 года назад +1

      Seems like the same voice capabilities that the Sharp ELSI-Quarts CT-660 talking alarm clock had - that "attention please," the voice, the alarm tone, so nostalgic to me as my Dad's stepdad had a CT-660 (which I inherited after he died, but ... can't seem to find)

    •  2 года назад +2

      The thing I use Siri most often for is to ask the time when I don't want to get out of bed.

  • @askhowiknow5527
    @askhowiknow5527 2 года назад +12

    Batteries not included
    In the present it’s an inconvenience but in the future it’s a blessing

  • @1D10CRACY
    @1D10CRACY 2 года назад +18

    My great Aunt collected clocks, she had one of those pyramid clocks and use to chuckle at the Japanese accent. I don't remember it sounding as bad as it does in the video, but it has been many years since I've heard it. It may still be in the family somewhere. I also remember that weather radio from Radio Shack, I think that must have been very popular.

    • @rodmunch69
      @rodmunch69 2 года назад +4

      How do you know your aunt was a 'she'? Are you a biologist?

  • @singeslayer8367
    @singeslayer8367 2 года назад +12

    it's always fun to hear early voice synthesis

  • @casaderobison2718
    @casaderobison2718 2 года назад +120

    I look forward to the retro brighting followup to get that packaging back to normal! :)

  • @merlyworm
    @merlyworm 2 года назад +64

    I truly miss radio shack. It was always fun to go in and see some of the stuff they had, that as you said, you literally couldnt get anywhere else. My dad gave me his 'portable' (cuz it had a handle to carry it. Not cuz it was easy to lug around. it prolly weighed 40 pounds) reel to reel player. I used it to record all kinda of stuff. But the only place you could get blank reels, even in the early 80s, was Radio Shack. I must have bought 50 of them over the 4-5 years I had that thing.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 2 года назад +11

      A good part of the world died when Radio Shack declined and left us. Teenage me would never have believed the high tech future would be a future without a place to browse and buy random DIY tech stuff.

    • @pauljs75
      @pauljs75 2 года назад +1

      Some like the pyramid are more like the stuff from mall stores like Sharper Image or Brookstone, where they'd have all the weird office toys and niche electronics.

    • @CommanderMouse72
      @CommanderMouse72 2 года назад +2

      New Zealand and Australia are lucky enough to have Jaycar electronics stores, basically our equivalent to RadioShack still going strong

  • @bummer6
    @bummer6 2 года назад +68

    0:45 - the fact that David points out that the girl specifically is probably still alive and not the boy implies that he knows the boy is dead as he has already killed the boy and the girl is probably next.

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 2 года назад +3

      That's quite a vivid imagination you got there.

    • @epakai
      @epakai 2 года назад

      His box has a different photo with only the girl unlike the photo he found online. That's probably why he only mentions her.

    • @bummer6
      @bummer6 2 года назад +1

      @@epakai I know, I was kidding, I don't actually believe David is a murderer.

    • @Incommensurabilities
      @Incommensurabilities 2 года назад

      @@epakai it seems there's two faces hiding behind the sticker, so it might be the same two kids in both photos

    • @DistrosProjects
      @DistrosProjects 2 года назад

      I mean, he is a gun guy so.... (jk)

  • @jaysonsmith5103
    @jaysonsmith5103 2 года назад +3

    Being blind since birth and born in 1978, I have lots of experience with different talking clocks. The Spartus is one I first saw in 1986. It has basically the same speech chip and functions as the Radio Shack VoxClock III which I got for Christmas in 1985. The Radio Shack VoxWatch is something I first saw in December of 1985, and its chip is based on that of the Sharp Talking Time I from the early 80's. The Talking Time I has a different alarm tune (Boccherini Minuet in A) and a few different features. Not that it'd be worth much, but with the distinctive chips the Spartus has, I wonder if it could be emulated in MAME or similar?

  • @ResortTV1
    @ResortTV1 2 года назад +319

    Love looking at these older clocks to see how the technology evolved. I still use an Alarm Clock (non-talking) that was manufactured in the late 80’s, and it works great! They definitely made things better in those days. Also, the tune playing on the Watch Alarm is a version of Bach’s Minuet in G. Cool! Enjoyed the video!

    • @bradleyj.fortner2203
      @bradleyj.fortner2203 2 года назад +7

      I quit using alarm clocks when I got a smartphone.

    • @ResortTV1
      @ResortTV1 2 года назад +12

      @@bradleyj.fortner2203 I use both. Lol. Just to be sure!

    • @a4000t
      @a4000t 2 года назад +4

      still using my old 80's spartus alarm clock also!

    • @mikesilva3868
      @mikesilva3868 2 года назад +2

      @@a4000t my family member has a old school alarm clock I think its from the 70s 🕺

    • @JosephDavies
      @JosephDavies 2 года назад +1

      I'm still using my radio alarm clock from the late '80s as well.

  • @RandomBogey
    @RandomBogey 2 года назад +11

    9:59 Man, that was wild- literally just as I was typing out a comment describing the little talking clock my grandma had, that I loved playing with as a kid, you whipped out the exact one she had. I used to carry it around her house and just press the button over and over again until my parents wanted to take it from me, but my grandma wouldn’t let them. I haven’t seen it in years, although I’m pretty sure my parents probably still have it somewhere. But, damn, that brought back memories.

  • @Recessio
    @Recessio Год назад +1

    5:03 that "oh yeah" caught me COMPLETELY off-guard! 😂

  • @JentaCookieCat
    @JentaCookieCat 2 года назад +14

    It’s been a long while since I’ve watched your videos, so I’m on a catching up binge watch while I’m coming down from a horribly crippling migraine.
    Your videos are so soothing. They’re gentle enough that they don’t hurt my ears and eyes when I have a migraine, and your voice is always level tone & gentle.
    I’m not the best at understanding most of what you talk about but I thoroughly enjoy it regardless.
    Thank you for making your content the way you do.

    • @cmpvariety1764
      @cmpvariety1764 2 года назад +1

      I have chronic migraines too and you're right his voice is soothing and it doesn't hurt in my head as much. I'm sorry you're dealing with migraines as well, but I'm in the same club as you so I know what you're going through it sucks.

  • @maggs131
    @maggs131 2 года назад +26

    You making that poor watch say dirty words caught me off balance. I was in tears 🤣👍

    • @BigjohnZ06
      @BigjohnZ06 2 года назад

      I thought I heard the watch say sex on the 6 o'clock hour! 😂😂🤣🤣

    • @redstonegod296
      @redstonegod296 2 года назад +2

      @@BigjohnZ06 Its sex o clock 😆

  • @Chris_In_Texas
    @Chris_In_Texas 2 года назад +34

    10:50 My dad had one of those weather radio cubes. I wish I still had it, was a good little radio. 👍 I see going back in the RS catalogs that it came out in 1970 and with him passing away a few years later, he had to get it pretty much when it came out, in either 1970 or 71. I was just a toddler back then and would listen to it for hours my mother said. It worked up right until I broke it by dropping it and landed on a corner and broke into many pieces that time. 😢

  • @FelineSublime
    @FelineSublime 2 года назад +11

    I'm only in my 30s, but man this brings back memories. I still have Dad's Micronta digital alarm clock that looks awfully similar to the Spartan clock without the console extending below it. Had it since I started school in 1992. Dad had that Realistic Weather Radio since as far back as I can remember, and I remember spending a lot of time trying to figure out how it worked as a kid.

  • @wladi92
    @wladi92 2 года назад

    While born in 1992, you still manage to make me miss an era I wasn't evem born in. The spirit of new innovations, a catalouge filled with new, daring technology, which often just said: "Hey, let us try something new, like, a talking pyramid clock?" "Hey, how about we make a wristwatch that just speaks the time?" In such times there wasn't an Android/ IOS library for such things, no bluetooth, you needed engineers and you needed people with fantasy and ambitions for new horizons....

  • @anthonybrunotheodd
    @anthonybrunotheodd 2 года назад +3

    I own and use as my morning alarm a Panasonic RC-6900 from 1975. It was the first clock that could actually tell you what time it is from a pre-recorded voice. (I guess somebody got into a recording booth and recorded every single minute and hour onto tape?) It wakes me up every morning by saying “Seven O’Clock!” And it will keep repeating the time every ten seconds until I turn it off. It uses a magnetic disc for the voice kind of like a cassette. I call it Rhoda because the voice sounds like Rhoda Morgenstern from the Mary Tyler Moore Show and Rhoda.

  • @eatonjb
    @eatonjb 2 года назад +11

    My grandma had things like this all over the house. She was blind , and in the eighties we shopped at radio shack for all this stuff, the clock The Watch, it was really cool when she got to watch

  • @wasoha
    @wasoha 2 года назад +1

    I've been poking around old newspapers and catalogs trying to find out more about Spartus and that clock, since the release date was in question.
    The earliest reference I can find of a talking clock from Spartus is in late 1982, a newspaper advertisement for their earlier AVT model 1410. (AVT stood for "Audio Visual Time" for which they also filed a trademark for in 1982.) The clock featured in your video is a slightly newer model number, a model 1411. The 1411 was apparently also sold at Radio Shack where it was known as the "Micronta VoxClock 3," that version of it debuting in Radio Shack's 1985 catalogue on page 148 under number 63-906 and labelled "New for '85." The prior VoxClock 2 that your video also features had previously hit shelves in late 1983 (that one apparently a rebranded Reizen according to another commenter).
    So with the immediately prior models in both product lines (Spartus' 1410 & Micronta's VoxClock 2) releasing in late 1982 and late 1983 respectively, and Radio Shack's rebranded version debuting sometime in 1985, it's likely that the dates on the chips do correspond roughly with its release. Perhaps as early as 1984 but probably not much earlier. Safe to assume that the Spartus 1411 is a ~1985 release despite its late 70s style.
    Regarding Spartus itself: The earliest reference I ran across of this company making clocks was in a newspaper in 1958, though I saw references to their camera equipment in 1941. I didn't dig farther back than that. In 1964 it was reported that manufacturing was being moved from Chicago to Louisville, the headquarters later listed on your clock. In 1996 Spartus was acquired by General Time (Westclox), and then in 2001 the bankrupt General Time was bought out by Salton Inc, although they later sold off their entire time products business in 2007 to NYL Holdings LLC. NYL Holdings still sells alarm clocks under the Westclox name today, but the Spartus branding goes unused.

  • @cla4631
    @cla4631 2 года назад

    I received the Vox clock for a gift. I loved it for years. I moved in with someone who hated it. Comprises we make. Good memories. Thanks this was fun to watch.

  • @ZENITH_System_3
    @ZENITH_System_3 2 года назад +22

    It’s strange how many things were thought to be the future but never caught on

  • @ericinla65
    @ericinla65 2 года назад +1

    HAD ONE OF THESE for my Blind Grandfather that used to live with us. It used to the speak the time every hour or when he pressed the top down.

  • @coltpoke2
    @coltpoke2 2 года назад +6

    Very jealous of that Spartus wood grain Alarm clock. I love the old Texas Instrument TMS5100 speech synthesizers chips that don't seem to be in production anymore. Those by far had the perfect balance of articulation and timbre. Hopefully one day I'll be able to snag a functional piece that can sit on my desk with one of those chips in it. Sort of like an Alarm clock! Great video as usual

  • @gingerman5123
    @gingerman5123 2 года назад +8

    14:45 11 year olds? I'm 43 and just LOL'd

  • @Hapasan808
    @Hapasan808 2 года назад +20

    14:18 Ironically, I just watched a video where they also mentioned that slang "sick" was relatively new, but apparently they found footage of skateboarders using the term, I believe in the 80s. Either way, it wasn't a widespread term until later. If anyone is interested I'll post a link the video.

    • @kandigloss6438
      @kandigloss6438 2 года назад

      Wasn't it used that way in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure and the original TMNT cartoon though?

    • @Malcadon
      @Malcadon 2 года назад

      I remember using it back in the late '80s, along with a lot of other kids, in place of "cool" or "awesome" to the confusion of a lot of adults. Mind you, I grew-up in California, so there were a lot of suffer and skater terms floating around, including the "shaka" hand sign, the "Cool S" graffiti sign, and elaborate hand-slaps that ends with pinched fingers sliding apart to go to the lips smoking an imaginary joint. It was all quite tubular, my dude.

  • @MurderMostFowl
    @MurderMostFowl 2 года назад +3

    I had a the star wars talking clock as a kid. My parents regretted getting it for me because I would purposely let the alarm go and go to listen to C3P0 lol

  • @dizzlebt
    @dizzlebt 2 года назад

    The watch brought back so many memories. So much so I remembered the tune as you played it on the alarm and it reminded me of how many times it used to go off in class at school as I used to let it play at my teachers annoyance lol

  • @mikeyc8139
    @mikeyc8139 2 года назад +20

    Your channel is so great. It's like nostalgia overload for me. In my teens, I can remember pouring through the Radio Shack catalog for hours and just dreaming! Then in my later teens when my "cooler" friends were figuring out how to score booze, my friends and I were in the electronics section at Radio Shack figuring out what to build next.

    • @dontmindbeingblindd
      @dontmindbeingblindd 2 года назад +3

      I am the only one in my grade who wants to learn how to build a computer.

    • @jonathan_herr
      @jonathan_herr 2 года назад +1

      @@dontmindbeingblindd then relish on this fact dude. You may feel like a dude outtatime but learning and discovering is always in vogue.

  • @jetjazz05
    @jetjazz05 2 года назад +6

    Speaking of NOAA weather stations, my car is a 2000 Saab, it has 3 radio settings; AM, FM, and WB. The weather band actually works, and since I live in Florida it can be handy. My car is my only weatherband radio though lol...

    • @puckcat22679
      @puckcat22679 2 года назад

      Subarus also have (used to have?) weatherband on their radios. That really should be more common.

  • @elizabethbester205
    @elizabethbester205 2 года назад +1

    Why do I want that clock's alarm as my phone's ringtone, it's just so gentle I need that in my life.

  • @darrencarter9812
    @darrencarter9812 2 года назад

    I was the store manager for a Radio Shack store in the town where the Institute for the Deaf and Blind as well as the Industries for the Blind is located. I sold a crap ton of talking watches and clocks. I used to argue with the warehouse trying to order larger quantities of them when they reduced the store manager's powers of ordering in the 1990's. I ended up having to go through my DM to order them... one of the things that led to their demise. Replenishment knew more about our markets than we did... same song different verse - there was a large Nascar track there and when I tried to order scanners and scanner accessories to sell for the races... same thing. I worked around it and had huge sales gains, but the store tanked once I left. Like the managers before me, the managers after me didn't take initiative. Another reason the company failed...

  • @shane1489
    @shane1489 2 года назад +16

    As primitive as the first one looks now I’m still impressed it was made nearly 60 years ago. Just consider what technology existed 60 years before that…

  • @MrCrossa
    @MrCrossa 2 года назад +5

    This video reminded me of a wristwatch my late great grandma gave to me that audibly told you the time when you pressed a button on it. I was so fascinated/amused by it that she got me one of my own. I don't remember the brand, but it was big, silver and it made a ding or gong sound before telling the time in a robotic voice.
    It's been 11 years since her passing, thank you for bringing back that memory.

  • @Narayan_1996
    @Narayan_1996 2 года назад +3

    I'm perplexed and amazed by that "F*ck it", I never thought I would laugh so much with this simple 80's joke, thank you, David 😂❤

    • @Narayan_1996
      @Narayan_1996 2 года назад +1

      The clock is kinda begging for you to stop doing that weird pressing of its button 😂😂😂

  • @Scarasyte
    @Scarasyte 2 года назад +2

    I'm reminded of my mother's Radio Shack Alarm Clock. The alarm sound was a rooster crowing. It was solid black with a LCD display, a few aqua colored switches and a large aqua button for having it speak the time. When setting the time I had to listen to constant loud ding noises followed by the voice telling me the time. I still have it somewhere in my house.

  • @smayds
    @smayds 2 года назад +21

    Finally we have an epic swearing moment on one of your videos, David!

    • @xp8969
      @xp8969 2 года назад +8

      A blessing for the 8bit RUclips Poop channel 😂

    • @xp8969
      @xp8969 2 года назад +7

      0:47 this will get remixed into something terrible

    • @grafton3073
      @grafton3073 2 года назад +2

      I was rolling. It totally caught me off guard. 👍🏻😎

  • @iansapp
    @iansapp 2 года назад +15

    My grandma gave me a pyramid shaped one (different than the one in this video) that had a really creepy bitcrushed rooster sound for the alarm. I hated that alarm so much, especially when the batteries were getting old and the pitch would change

    • @MazLad
      @MazLad 2 года назад

      Ross RTC-8 alarm clock by any chance?

    • @bobblum5973
      @bobblum5973 2 года назад

      Was it white with an orange-ish colored button? I think we had one like that for my dad, more of a rectangular base than a square, still a pyramid shape.

    • @MarcKloos
      @MarcKloos 2 года назад

      My dad was given a portable alarm clock that could speak. And yes, it has this crazy electronic rooster alarm in it!

    • @iansapp
      @iansapp 2 года назад

      I'm not sure who made it but it looks like it's called the T-10A talking alarm clock. Mine was the black one with white button

    • @sharonbraselton4302
      @sharonbraselton4302 2 года назад

      ñew Custer has lights up when diner time restreàñts use them

  • @dani_3D
    @dani_3D 2 года назад +2

    Whenever I'm looking for my nostagic trip down PC memory lane (haha so punny) it brings me right here everytime. Something about the synth intro, the throwback information and general 8-Bit Guy style I really enjoy watching as well as some unexpected laughs. Thank you 8-Bit, always looking forward to the next bit of PC history you bring us!

  • @OldManTheseDays
    @OldManTheseDays 2 года назад +3

    I’m perhaps more impressed with the engineering of the child’s toy than any of the others.

  • @Geeksmithing
    @Geeksmithing 2 года назад +5

    As always, super interesting Time Capsule Episode! Thanks man!

  • @The_Slippery_Slope_NZ
    @The_Slippery_Slope_NZ 2 года назад +25

    As soon as you took that yellowed cover off the clock at 4:33 I swear I heard LGR groan in pleasure at the wood grain.

    • @retropuffer2986
      @retropuffer2986 2 года назад +3

      He'd be sniffing that '70s air trapped in the box.

    • @Leofwine
      @Leofwine 2 года назад +1

      @@retropuffer2986 yeah I was going to say that: “What about the smell?”

  • @hgmman
    @hgmman 2 года назад +2

    6:06 Wow 9 volts for a backup battery. We sure have come a long way

  • @rimbaud0000
    @rimbaud0000 2 года назад +1

    The first woodgrain clock is a *very* nice design and that speech pretty good. Great job past product designers.

  • @jamesnoland7821
    @jamesnoland7821 2 года назад +61

    13:45 Must have been a fairly popular tune in the 80s ...does anyone remember the musical duel in "Electric Dreams" (1984)?
    The piece is "Minuet in G Major" by Christian Petzold (frequently erroneously attributed to J.S. Bach)
    Also 5PM had me rolling!!

    • @WacKEDmaN
      @WacKEDmaN 2 года назад +4

      yes.. originally by Bach!... composed for Electric Dreams by the synth master Giorgio Moroder (yes the same "my name is Giovanni Giorgio, but everyone calls me Giorgio!")

    • @todddixon1549
      @todddixon1549 2 года назад +2

      That was one of the most significant parts of the movie. Can’t forget that scene!

    • @chackokhan
      @chackokhan 2 года назад

      I still love that movie, I remember that song too as well of the amazing graphic animations at that time.

    • @RedwoodRhiadra
      @RedwoodRhiadra 2 года назад +1

      @@WacKEDmaN Actually not by Bach, as Noland says, though they were misattributed until 1979.

    • @archivethearchives
      @archivethearchives 2 года назад

      Good spotting of that watch tune. I was looking to see if anyone noted it was a Minuet, as I was made to play that tune on a piano when I was taking lessons as a kid. 😁😁😁

  • @PaulinesPastimes
    @PaulinesPastimes 2 года назад +34

    You can imagine that any modern talking watch would be rigorously tested and any such 'fun' words immediately locked out and expunged in case someone had a laugh. Naughty, naughty! 😄

  • @FatherAxeKeeper
    @FatherAxeKeeper 2 года назад +8

    I actually think the VoxClock looks cooler than the Seiko Pyramid clock. It looks high tech while the pyramid looks chintzy. I could imagine seeing the VoxClock on Dick Tracy or Get Smart haha.
    Also, I remember saying "sick!" for something that was cool back in the early 90s!

    • @Xezlec
      @Xezlec 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah he's totally wrong. "Sick" has been around for a while in the skater community.

  • @emehlhar
    @emehlhar 2 года назад

    I used to work at a Radio Shack in those talking device times. It is quite nostalgic to hear all those synthetic voices again. I never knew you could get the watch to spew out such vulgarities. Made me laugh like an 11 year old too. Thanks.

  • @10p6
    @10p6 2 года назад +5

    I had the talking watch and pyramid one. In the mid 80's, my parents had the best one though, a talking alarm clock that would cuss at you when using snooze.

  • @catagris
    @catagris 2 года назад +5

    Love your videos man. Thank you. You have increased my interesting in this generation of tech a ton! Also allows me to under tech to a much deeper level.

  • @FUBBA
    @FUBBA Год назад +3

    Any time I see Seiko in a title of a channel I love I get excited. Youre lucky to have that in your possession

  • @NorCalEAS208
    @NorCalEAS208 2 года назад +4

    I would absolutely love to see a NOAA Weather Radio video from the 8-Bit Guy. I find it to be a really interesting topic.

  • @OffGridAussiePrepper
    @OffGridAussiePrepper 2 года назад +6

    I love my realistic brand gear, they take me back to some happy times when i got to go to Tandy shop in Australia and see some grand things on the shelves. When i can i try and find the stuff i saw on the shelf and add it to my collection, hopefully still working.

  • @KennethDPedersen
    @KennethDPedersen 2 года назад +14

    Radio Shack was the bomb back in the day, I have many childhood memories of hearing the time announced at a few friends houses.
    you should totally do one on NOAA radio's that would be fun.

    • @marcusdamberger
      @marcusdamberger 2 года назад

      My friends Dad had several of these, one at the house and one or two at the farm they had 5 miles outside of town. It was the Midwest, so these would go off with a siren alarm sound when there was a storm warning or tornado warning and then automatically key on the speaker so you could hear the announcement.

    • @JamesHalfHorse
      @JamesHalfHorse 2 года назад

      If memory serves it was fairly easy to modify the little cube ones to pick up other frequencies like air traffic.

  • @xINVISIGOTHx
    @xINVISIGOTHx 2 года назад +5

    I know this is a completely different technology, but I had a pokemon pocketwatch that talked, and it was amazing. There's nothing better that being able to lay in bed with your eyes closed, and push 1 button in your hand and hear "SEVEN, FIFTY, FIVE!" (in Ash's voice lol) but just the convenience, it was great

  • @jovetj
    @jovetj 2 года назад

    My father was blind, and he had all sorts of talking technologies around. He had a couple of VoxClocks, and I never knew they were from Radio Shack until this video. The wording is long worn off, even. He also liked the talking wristwatches from Radio Shack until they discontinued them. Radio Shack also made a very useful talking indoor-outdoor thermometer. My dad's favorite talking devices, besides his computer, was an 80s Sharp Elsi Mate EL-640 Clock Calculator, and more recently, talking barcode scanner for identifying cans (etc) by UPC.

  • @techtriggr
    @techtriggr 2 года назад +7

    i definitely want that Seiko pyramid clock in my house. it looks gorgeous

  • @X-OR_
    @X-OR_ 2 года назад +4

    Always have the "Time" to see a The 8-Bit Guy Video

  • @zaugitude
    @zaugitude 2 года назад

    That watch is, as you said, the BEST!
    You were very lucky to have had one as a child.

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker1 2 года назад

    My great aunt Mabel had both the Vox clock 2 and the Seiko pyramid at various times. She was blind and it was the only way she could tell time. Made her life easier, and I loved playing with them when i was a kid.

  • @jamesdye4603
    @jamesdye4603 2 года назад +6

    I have a regular Spartus alarm clock from the 80s and I still use it. Same basic design with the wood look and just a smaller control panel in the front.

    • @bbartky
      @bbartky 2 года назад +1

      I also bought a regular Spartus alarm clock back in the ‘80s, which also had the same basic design. It was really inexpensive but worked for over 20 years.

  • @MrEightThreeOne
    @MrEightThreeOne 2 года назад +19

    This was good! I enjoyed learning about this, I don't know much about talking clocks at all so this was quite educational for me. Not much else to say other than good job!

  • @jokerinexile
    @jokerinexile 2 года назад +6

    I remember having the pyramid clock when I was a kid. Loved that thing. Eventually I broke it by hitting the too too many times.

  • @davidartina5022
    @davidartina5022 2 года назад

    I have that pyramid clock on my desk in front of me. Still working great. It was a gift from an account manager at Seiko, the parent company of Epson, when we became Epson dealers back in 1985. (Epson sold PCs then for a short time as well as printers). Side note about that. Seiko claimed they made the first computer printer in the 1970s which they called the EP for Electronic Printer. Their second model was much smaller and a development of the EP so they called it SonofEP - and when they needed a name for a new printer division they turned that around to become Epson. First PC printer was the Epson MX80 which was revolutionary and sold with most of the first IBM PCs in the early 80s.

  • @rich1668
    @rich1668 2 года назад +17

    5:02 Impressive, American electronics had fitted plugs back then, in the UK we still had to fit plugs on most items way into the 80’s

    • @startedtech
      @startedtech 2 года назад +9

      As far as I'm aware that's how they've been almost forever here in the states. My dad's got some projectors from the 1920s with Kodak branded plugs.

    • @evensgrey
      @evensgrey 2 года назад +6

      I always thought that was a long-lasting hold over from WWII. There's a LOT of copper in a proper UK plug, and it would have saved a lot to manufacture devices with the plugs to be fitted by the end user. Or perhaps it was an artifact from plugs not being standardized until much later than electrical goods becoming popular.

    • @AaronOfMpls
      @AaronOfMpls 2 года назад +3

      @@evensgrey Yah, I figure it was a holdover from then too -- especially since the UK changed plug and outlet designs right after WW2. People didn't change all their outlets right away, so it made sense to sell things without plugs, and wire up the kind of plug you needed.
      Meanwhile, here in the US, the 2-prong version of our plugs and outlets was already a long-established standard. EDIT: And the 3-prong version had already been invented in the 1920s.

    • @evensgrey
      @evensgrey 2 года назад +2

      @@AaronOfMpls My current apartment was (or so I'm told) built in the 1930's, doing a rather bad imitation of a rich family home from about 1880. Two of the rooms in my apartment have what might be original electrical outlets, on the floorboard on the OUTSIDE walls, two prong, no polarization. (I've got modern outlets on the common interior wall of the two rooms. 15 Amps is plenty of power for everything I have in here, fortunately.)

    • @meetoo594
      @meetoo594 2 года назад +3

      @@AaronOfMpls my house still has a few round pin bakalite sockets. They are part of a disconnected ring main that no one bothered to remove when the house was renovated and rewired. House is about 60 years old and in the uk.

  • @whopoder
    @whopoder 2 года назад +17

    Sir, I love voice synthesizers. In the 80's, we saw Speack Spell in the movies and we were crazy to get one (in Brazil it didn't exist).
    The male voice is usually better than the female voice (frequency makes it bad). I was impressed with the VoxClock2, clear and beautiful voice. THANK YOU for the amazing video!!!
    It was funny you pressing the wristwatch repeatedly :DDDD Sorry about my poor english xD

  • @quideater
    @quideater 2 года назад

    my great grandmother is blind and partly deaf and uses one of the alarm clocks that are in the video, she bought it all the way back then and it still works now !!!

  • @Dreamshadow1977
    @Dreamshadow1977 2 года назад +1

    I love the nostagia you give me for Radio Shack. My dad worked there from 84 to 91 I believe, and I got to see a fair bit of their computer tech growing up.

  • @todddixon1549
    @todddixon1549 2 года назад +6

    Being about 9 years older than you my first real watch thrill was the Casio calculator watch around 1980. Later on the scientific calculator watch blew my mind away but freaked out the school staff when it came to my math exams! Had to remove it before I went in! 🙁 Still aced the exams though! 😅

    • @kendelion
      @kendelion 2 года назад +1

      Imagine kids feeling the same with apple watches today, and 35yrs from now what tech would make the smart watch of today seem like old tech.

  • @xp8969
    @xp8969 2 года назад +6

    14:17 no, we said "that's sick" back in the 80's and all thru the 90's, no shock that the 8-bit guy never heard it til 20 years later tho

    • @lagtvfan2128
      @lagtvfan2128 2 года назад

      It doesn't matter. That's not even what it says. It obviously says "getting sex".

    • @mellowgeekstudio
      @mellowgeekstudio 2 года назад

      Thanks! I was looking for a comment clarifying this cause, as someone who isn't a native speaker but absorbs a lot of American culture through movies, tv shows and games, that confused the heck out of me.

    • @alb9047
      @alb9047 Год назад

      It says suffocate.

  • @d3drummerboy
    @d3drummerboy 2 года назад +1

    I always find 8bit guys videos so entertaining, all the vintage tech.

  • @davidjhills
    @davidjhills 2 года назад

    You channel gives me nostalgia for the time before I was born. I love it

  • @CraigRodmellMusic
    @CraigRodmellMusic 2 года назад +20

    Something different. I'd never even heard of these before. Mind you, it's quite possible that many of these never reached New Zealand in the first place. Nonetheless, very interesting. Thanks for posting, and I look forward to the next installment.

    • @maggs131
      @maggs131 2 года назад +3

      I thought I saw a vox clock on Bilbos Baggins desk 🤔

    • @CraigRodmellMusic
      @CraigRodmellMusic 2 года назад +2

      I'll have to get out my Lord of the Rings DVDs and check.

    • @todddixon1549
      @todddixon1549 2 года назад +1

      In NZ you’d find them in Dick Smith and Tandy type stores. Not likely to find them in Farmers Dept stores. At least not in the early days.

    • @CraigRodmellMusic
      @CraigRodmellMusic 2 года назад

      @@todddixon1549 We never had Tandy here as far as I know, and Dick Smith went out of business several years ago.

    • @todddixon1549
      @todddixon1549 2 года назад +1

      @@CraigRodmellMusic Yes I was generalising as to the type of store. Back then Dick Smith was one of my favourite haunts for gadgets and all things electronic.

  • @SpaceTimer369
    @SpaceTimer369 2 года назад +30

    its crazy how simple that first clock is,
    still still a work of engenearing though

  • @tedmerr
    @tedmerr 2 года назад

    That Seiko clock was bought at Seidenburg Luggage. My parents and grandparents used to shop there all the time. 2 Locations just outside of Philly. They were the best!

  • @BEdmonson85
    @BEdmonson85 2 года назад

    You are right about Radio Shack in the mid 80's and early 90's. I used to get their mail-order catalog every year, it was one of the highlights of the year when I was a kid. I once asked my mom to stop in to a local Radio Shack after work to order a chip I had found while browsing the catalog. Mom said when the guy behind the counter saw my catalog , he said that thing looks like it gets more use than our store copy lol. That chip was an ISD1000 voice recorder IC, btw. Oh the fun I had with that thing =D

  • @roachtoasties
    @roachtoasties 2 года назад +54

    His and hers alarms. Did you test it to see if your spouse set the "hers alarm," that you only woke up to the "his alarm," and vice versa? :) I have a clock with two alarms too. Alarm 1 and Alarm 2. It's much newer, so I guess clocks got gender neutral in the 21st century.

    • @AaronOfMpls
      @AaronOfMpls 2 года назад +1

      My current alarm is like yours, except either can be set to the radio or to beeping.
      My old tape player alarm clock though, the two alarms were hardwired to radio/tape and beeping.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl 2 года назад +7

      The original Sony Walkman famously had "Guys" & "Dolls" headphone sockets, Nowadays people like Sam Smith would want "They1" & "They2" :-)

    • @Vortexcube
      @Vortexcube 2 года назад +5

      I want to know if they sounded any different.

    • @QOTSAPT
      @QOTSAPT 2 года назад +2

      The hers clock can't wake you up, soap time is much later on.

    • @Briskeeeen
      @Briskeeeen 2 года назад

      @@MrDuncl yeah, imagine not wanting everything to be pointless gendered.