The queue-bothering proto-PowerPoint

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  • Опубликовано: 25 мар 2023
  • If you queued up in a UK Post Office in the 1980s you might have seen one of these carts in action. If you were in business or education in 1970s America you might have viewed a presentation from one of these carts. It's a format that you were made to watch, whether you wanted to or not.
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @langam7017
    @langam7017 Год назад +76

    "HAVE YOU THOUGHT ABOUT BUYING STAMPS TODAY?"
    Aye no, I'm at the post office to get my hair cut.

  • @bosstowndynamics5488
    @bosstowndynamics5488 Год назад +1475

    I like how Matt's long search for a 60Hz inverter that works properly with old audiovisual gear has finally competed successfully

    • @allenellisdewitt
      @allenellisdewitt Год назад +84

      It's such an obvious solution in retrospect!

    • @markjames8664
      @markjames8664 Год назад +115

      With a bigger battery, Matt could continue producing weekly videos after the collapse of modern civilization.

    • @jackbaxter-williams8059
      @jackbaxter-williams8059 Год назад +40

      I feel like a sponsorship is in order. I hear they pay pretty well. Do a review matt !
      BTW, i still love your outro song!

    • @SyntheticFuture
      @SyntheticFuture Год назад +38

      I also love how it's not an inverter at all XD Sometimes the right tool is the thing you weren't looking for 😄

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Год назад +42

      @@allenellisdewitt It really isn't that easy though, his previous attempt discovered that Ryobi's "pure sine wave" inverter was anything but.

  • @me3333
    @me3333 Год назад +322

    Back in the 80's my grandfather worked at a tractor dealership and brought one of these systems home. It was meant to demonstrate how to repair the new equipment coming out on tractors. It was pretty cool because you could have the part right there in front of you and it was like a step by step guide to work on it. As a kid I watched all of the tapes and it really helped me understand a lot of mechanical systems that could be applied to cars, trucks etc. and helped spur my interest in working on cars

    • @Caratcho
      @Caratcho Год назад +31

      An analog RUclips tutorial 🤪

    • @IvanKowalenko
      @IvanKowalenko Год назад +11

      iFixit of the 80s.

    • @Breakstuff455khz
      @Breakstuff455khz Год назад +19

      My father worked for Amtrak when I was a kid and taught training classes for the mechanical department, meaning we had a few boxes of very technical VHS tapes in the basement at all times. I spent hours and hours watching all the hits like "Locomotive air brake departure test" and "Introduction to Head-End-Power". Knew more about P42 locomotives than anybody else in elementary school.

    • @denisohbrien
      @denisohbrien Год назад +8

      aaand fastforward to now where your not allowed to work on the tractor you own and bought.

    • @bertram-raven
      @bertram-raven Год назад +2

      But now the same manufacturer which ensures you understand you do not own anything and will be happy.

  • @congaman100
    @congaman100 Год назад +65

    In the mid 80's I worked as a security guard at night in a retail store being built in a local mall. The music system in the store was so accurately repeditave I could eventually tell the current time by the song playing.

  • @hoilst265
    @hoilst265 Год назад +845

    The fact that they've used Iron Maiden's "Number Of The Beast" as the ideal gift - excellent. And supremely 80s Britain.

    • @catfish552
      @catfish552 Год назад +61

      Hehe, yup. That would still be the ideal gift for me today!

    • @davekp6773
      @davekp6773 Год назад +80

      Yep, and now the Post Office have come full circle by recently releasing Iron Maiden commemorative stamps. I think they are only the fifth group to be commemorated.

    • @jameslaidler2152
      @jameslaidler2152 Год назад +48

      Ya beat me to it. Seriously though, showing a young fellow holding a flippin' Iron Maiden album is hilarious.

    • @astroboirap
      @astroboirap Год назад +5

      with Christopher Reeve buying it

    • @odkres
      @odkres Год назад +29

      I was a bit surprised, I wouldn't have thought Maiden was accepted as a good and proper thing in that "official" sphere yet.

  • @WrenFJ
    @WrenFJ Год назад +361

    We'd LOVE the story on your friend's pirate action movie business

    • @mariorossi9300
      @mariorossi9300 Год назад +10

      I agree, must be an interesting story.

    • @llucos100
      @llucos100 Год назад +59

      ****** Manchester Police has joined the chat ******

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Год назад +10

      No doubt a friend of a friend of a friend! ;-)

    • @deanagoes2791
      @deanagoes2791 Год назад +13

      Hongkong connection 😂

    • @medes5597
      @medes5597 Год назад +8

      Pretty sure it was a guy with a mail order business. Not a friend.

  • @ChrisMezzolesta
    @ChrisMezzolesta Год назад +680

    Well Mat, you've inadvertently solved a 50-year mystery for me! The quick succession of slides about Ernie and premium bonds helped me decipher just what Ian Anderson meant by the line "Saying 'how's your granny and good old Ernie, he coughed up a tenner on a premium bond win' " in "Thick as a Brick". Being in the States I had no idea what he was talking about so this quick bit of your video prompted me to Google Ernie and premium bond - and there was the answer! I had no idea the Ernie being referred to wasn't a local chap down the pub, but the acronym for the machine generating the numbers for the 'lottery'! I'll bet nobody else had a connection from this video to Jethro Tull on their Bingo card!!!! Thanks and great job as always!

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  Год назад +153

      Glad I could help.

    • @Richardincancale
      @Richardincancale Год назад +53

      ERNIE == Electronic Random Number Indicating Equipment

    • @EzeePosseTV
      @EzeePosseTV Год назад +29

      .. And he drove the fastest Milk Cart in the west!

    • @xaenon
      @xaenon Год назад +5

      @@EzeePosseTV I thought it was Irving....
      Edit: Never mind. Got two different songs mixed up in my head.

    • @TWL380
      @TWL380 Год назад +1

      ​@Techmoan I knew you were a fellow Metokur fan 😂

  • @borisgalos6967
    @borisgalos6967 Год назад +150

    The color fading is typical of Ektrachrome compatible film (which also includes things like Agfa and Fuji).
    Kodachrome typically is immune to fading. That process is unique to Kodak and required massively complex equipment to process. It's interesting to note that Kodachrome is actually a black and white film that has layers dyed during processing and it was invented by hobbyist chemists Mannes and Godowsky in Mannes' kitchen. Their day jobs were as professional musicians.

    • @v-g-z3689
      @v-g-z3689 Год назад +6

      Yes, Kodachrome is more or less immune to that, but Ektachrome suffered from it a lot, so did Fuji. However Agfa and 3m film held up a lot better, not quite as excellent as Kodachrome, but close!

    • @StackOverflow80
      @StackOverflow80 Год назад

      I think it is Eastmancolor production prints what fades so heavily. Ektachrome et al too, but not so extremely like the Eastmancolor mass production prints of that era.

    • @lunquewill
      @lunquewill Год назад

      Do the faded films have enough color remaining to be able to digitally resurrect them?

    • @v-g-z3689
      @v-g-z3689 Год назад

      @@lunquewill Pretty much anything can be done with digital tinkering nowerdays. If that's also authentic then is a different story, I consider any but the conservative methods as botch. (That opinion of course doesn't apply for heavily damaged but highly valuable material that needs to be resurrected at any cost.)

    • @StackOverflow80
      @StackOverflow80 Год назад

      @@lunquewill They say at least ca 4% of original dye density is necessary to fully restore the colour.

  • @cusemoneyman
    @cusemoneyman Год назад +510

    Importing a US portable battery with 60Hz AC output was a stroke of genius.

    • @lucasRem-ku6eb
      @lucasRem-ku6eb Год назад +2

      someone did forced that on him

    • @pvman2
      @pvman2 Год назад +49

      So, he could import a Li-ion batt, but not an inert, obsolete, portable, rear projector? Bureaucrats!!!

    • @2009dudeman
      @2009dudeman Год назад +49

      @@pvman2 More likely the export paperwork wasn't filled out correctly. CBP is pretty anal about their paperwork and filing. They won't let an item through because they don't understand it and think it's prohibited, but if you call it an "engineering sample" it will get through no problem. This is how a lot of test and computer equipment gets through. If I want to ship half a dozen circuit boards to Australia for example, I could list what they are and what hazards they may have (simple don't put a CR2032 battery and you can list 'none'). But if the boards are just tough pressure sensors for recording overpressure events up close, and you call them "explosion sensors", there is a good chance the word explosion keeps your items off the plane.
      Thats just an example, there are far less ridiculous names that have kept things stuck in customs.

    • @ailivac
      @ailivac Год назад +4

      Sounds like the shipping would cost more than just importing an inverter without a heavy battery already attached.

    • @li5up6
      @li5up6 Год назад

      ​@@2009dudeman a😊

  • @TheNugettinage
    @TheNugettinage Год назад +198

    I really like that slide changing mechanism. There's just something about the quick smooth movement and the little "swish" that appeals to me. Tickles the same part of the brain as when something is cut perfectly or perfectly fits into a socket or something.

    • @jamesbennettmusic
      @jamesbennettmusic Год назад +19

      it would be a great transition to have on modern presentation software!

    • @gunsunnuva8346
      @gunsunnuva8346 Год назад +24

      It's the auditory equivalent of the scissors gliding as you cut wrapping paper.

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum Год назад +8

      It looks like a special effect, but it's just the film advancing. And I guess Labelle was too cheap to have any sort of blanking mechanism for when the film is in motion, or maybe they realised it looks better this way.

    • @Mike28625
      @Mike28625 Год назад +4

      I like how it fails. That warbling noise is neat o

    • @dancingwiththedogsdj
      @dancingwiththedogsdj Год назад +2

      I'd never thought of that before...how nice it sounds... I mean with the daily use of slide show machines these days 📱💻 but hearing the mechanism perform is glorious.... I'm kinda scared now to see how many ASMR videos cover slides or something similar.... Might be my new sleeping partner. 😴🤤😴🤤 Great video as always! Have a wonderful day everyone! & Smile! - it makes everyone wonder what you're up to!! 🍻🌎❤️🌮

  •  Год назад +3

    Hello: I am a very old man from Patagonia, Argentina. We did not have those equipments but you remembered me when I went to the local and huge postal office back in the 60´s and 70´s. I thank you for all in your channel. Cheers!!!

  • @bwc1976
    @bwc1976 Год назад +19

    I remember when I was a kid, a saleslady for swimming pools came to our house and had a self-contained slide show unit like this for her presentation! Very exciting to see, but my parents never did buy that swimming pool.

  • @bengineer_the
    @bengineer_the Год назад +19

    "Reinventing the reel" would have been the perfect advert for the micro cassette! XD

  • @moserfugger6363
    @moserfugger6363 Год назад +161

    Mr. Techmoan really is the Indiana Jones of technical oddities. It's always great fun to join him on his adventures. :)
    Greetings from Germany

    • @filanfyretracker
      @filanfyretracker Год назад +10

      Germany gave us one of the devices that truly made this channel famous for its oddtech audio formats. the Tefifon.

    • @moserfugger6363
      @moserfugger6363 Год назад +3

      @@filanfyretracker
      Gern geschehen! :)
      Grüße aus Deutschland

    • @MingJianYap
      @MingJianYap Год назад

      needs to do a crossover with oddityarchive

  • @2Nu
    @2Nu Год назад +99

    Matt, you always manage to make the ordinary, mundane or otherwise arcane vintage tech utterly fascinating with your affable and engaging presentation approach. Kudos Mate! 👏👏

  • @patrickhobbs8201
    @patrickhobbs8201 Год назад +19

    I had a history teacher in 2004 that was still using these to supplement lessons about the American Revolution. It was mostly illustrated and narrated folklore. I *distinctly* remember how pink the slides were.

  • @moseshorowitz4345
    @moseshorowitz4345 Год назад +104

    Units very much like this one were common in the United States back in the Seventies. I would see them most often at those enormous Home Show, Camping Show, and other large-hall exhibitions. Salesmen of all types would set one up on a table to attract potential customers. Of course, it also drew in tech-minded tykes like myself, eager to figure out the inner workings of this odd beast.

    • @darryl7256
      @darryl7256 Год назад +6

      I also remember seeing these running little info sessions about exhibits in museums when my family was driving around the US & Canada in the late 70s.

    • @toonman361
      @toonman361 Год назад +1

      Sounds exactly like me.

  • @kenmore01
    @kenmore01 Год назад +36

    Hey Matt, if you decide to fix that unit up, double check that there is no DC Voltage across that volume pot. If there is, it makes that crackling much worse and it has a bad blocking capacitor in it. Fun video! Thanks!

    • @caddelworth
      @caddelworth Год назад +4

      It's also possible that the carbon (it WILL be carbon!) track inside the pot has either "come off" or simply been worn away over time. In which case, replace the pot (DUH!).

  • @jbaldwin1970
    @jbaldwin1970 Год назад +73

    In the mid 90s the large company I worked for (you’ll know them if I mention them) trialled a more up to date version of this. Computer monitors in every branch with content transmitted overnight via modem. I was responsible for putting together the slideshows.
    We piloted it with about six stores. I quite enjoyed messing with the system and trying to make it creative. But the library music they gave us was the usual guff and, despite my best attempts, it was difficult to make it anything less than irritating.
    The six trial branches immediately turned down the volume rather than go crazy and the resulting silent shows soon got covered up with stock.
    Fortunately I’d been reading about a new thing called the worldwide web and began experimenting with it. Bye bye remote AV system

    • @johnclarkorme5211
      @johnclarkorme5211 Год назад +4

      I was thinking, I can remember these in the 90s, and I'm sure they had the word Video something on the plastic cabinet and I think they were CRTs rather than a projector. They were very irritating, and didnt last long

    • @Demiglitch
      @Demiglitch Год назад +1

      Did that World Wide Web ever take off then?

    • @jbaldwin1970
      @jbaldwin1970 Год назад +1

      @@Demiglitch the jury is still out

  • @ennexthefox
    @ennexthefox Год назад +71

    As a Midwesterner, I’m very interested to hear Mat try to pronounce “Oconomowoc, Wisconsin” where La Belle Industries was based!

    • @IvanKowalenko
      @IvanKowalenko Год назад +3

      Or Wayzata.

    • @edherdman9973
      @edherdman9973 Год назад

      I used to be in the Midwest and had to look that one up! Wayzata too.

    • @jamespfitz
      @jamespfitz 11 месяцев назад

      Muscoda

    • @craigduncan4826
      @craigduncan4826 11 месяцев назад +1

      AWK-On-omo-wock
      Is my guess - like oconomowalk
      Had to read it a few times but to me it seems like it prolly sounds just like you’d expect. Close?

  • @video99couk
    @video99couk Год назад +8

    I've run some of these for National Savings. My friend Chris Squires of savethosememories scanned the cine film and I ran the 8-track part, then we stuck the audio and video parts back together. I've mentioned this on my channel a while back.

  • @HappyMinds1
    @HappyMinds1 Год назад +15

    Matt is a cultural historian and as a nation we should acknowledge his hard work and effort. Amazing documentation not just of technology but the very time it was used in.

  • @Syd_Layne
    @Syd_Layne Год назад +2

    1:31 "...at one of the elbows of the zig-zag..."
    Whenever I've been in a ziz-zag queue, I've wondered about the proper name for the 180° turns at the ends. "Elbows" - another mystery solved. Watching Matt's videos, every day is a schoolday...

  • @Asterra2
    @Asterra2 Год назад +24

    I just gotta say I really love the unique look of super high-detail 4K video recordings of inherently low-quality film slides. It's a juxtaposition that I consider a rare treat. Like seeing an old favorite film that you used to watch on VHS or whatever, but somebody went and found a film print and decided to make a 4K bluray out of it.

  • @lraszewski
    @lraszewski Год назад +6

    I never happened upon one of these in my youth. In the '80s, my semi-rural town was slow to move to videocassette, but we still used filmstrip projectors in school. However, the film side of this reminds me a lot of the endless-loop video cartridges that Fisher-Price sold as a children's toy.

  • @deeiks12
    @deeiks12 Год назад +26

    I love the aesthetics of the graphic design for the post office slides. looks awesome.

    • @NatureOkie
      @NatureOkie Год назад +5

      I like the idea of Aerogramme.
      I often sent a bi-fold post card here in USA, you write one half fold it over, and they reply back, with the other, Pre-stamped postcard Attached. (Businesses could print the pre-addressed return, so they didn't send the reply card to Aunty Matilda, instead.😂

  • @jeffh8803
    @jeffh8803 Год назад +29

    Hey Techmoan, you're a genuine historian and archivist dealing with this stuff. I can only imagine there are hundreds of historical business presentations that would be lost forever without people digitizing them

  • @jamiestotz2516
    @jamiestotz2516 Год назад +20

    When I was in elementary school in the early '70s we had a similar educational AV system called the Ealing film loop. It was a cartridge with an endless loop of film which probably used normal sound-on-film for the audio. However, because it was a loop, it used a mechanism similar to the 8-track that pulled from the center and rewound on the outside. I was in the US, but I think Ealing was a British company.

    • @Alpha8713
      @Alpha8713 Год назад +5

      We had these, too. They were developed by Technicolor (a US company) and called the "Magi-Cartridge." There are 8mm and super-8mm versions of it, and the cartridges are (smartly) designed to not fit the wrong type of projector.

  • @羽衣甘藍奧頓
    @羽衣甘藍奧頓 Год назад +24

    I love your channel so much Techmoan. I grew up in the 70's/80's. and your channel warms my heart with nostalgia and technical retro knowlege. Thank you.

    • @duskonanyavarld1786
      @duskonanyavarld1786 Год назад +3

      I also like his channel but I am younger and also a Swede, I like to learn about retro tech. Technoman have a wonderful voice.

    • @sakurojason
      @sakurojason Год назад +1

      It’s interesting how his latest videos already feel nostalgic to me. I’ve been watching this channel for a few years now and on each video, the outro makes me tear up in nostalgia…

  • @CarlRhoades
    @CarlRhoades Год назад +100

    I remember these in school here in Colorado... It was used for supplemental content alongside the VHS tapes for Voyage of the Mimi. Never thought something would bring that back to my mind from 1985!

    • @herbiehusker1889
      @herbiehusker1889 Год назад +3

      Voyage of the Mimi, lol. Did you also see Tomes & Talismans?

    • @CarlRhoades
      @CarlRhoades Год назад

      @@herbiehusker1889 Nope. Read the plot on the Wikipedia page, I'd definitely remember that one, even all these years later! XD

    • @herbiehusker1889
      @herbiehusker1889 Год назад +2

      @Ikadzuchi too bad. It was good, just like Voyage of the Mimi.

    • @AlfredRusselWallace
      @AlfredRusselWallace Год назад +3

      VOYAGE OF THE MIMI HOLY SHIT MY BRAIN

    • @TheBrokenTech
      @TheBrokenTech Год назад +3

      Wow.. You were in a fancy school system. We had regular film projectors and a compact cassette tape to accompany them and person (usually a student) would have to manually advance the projector every time the tape would BEEP...
      Then again, we also had Betamax players, so maybe my school system just made bad financial decisions. 😆

  • @alextirrellRI
    @alextirrellRI Год назад +19

    I’m surprised we didn’t have something like this in my elementary school in the early 90’s. Our library would show a lot of film strips which were a much more rudimentary version, usually accompanied by a cassette tape with an audible tone to advance the film strip.

    • @jonc4403
      @jonc4403 Год назад +2

      I suspect it came down to cost. Film strips were older, but the projectors were sometimes more recent. The older projectors used a record for the audio, the later ones used a compact cassette. The format having been around longer meant more content available, particularly since neither the audio nor the film technology were proprietary, which this was. Most of the projectors at my school were Dukane, so I suspect the Labelle projectors were more expensive, and this fancy format, being marketed to business, was more expensive still. And of course who cares if it's more work to set up, it's just a teacher doing it, not an important businessman. (sarcasm)

  • @chickenpollo1013
    @chickenpollo1013 Год назад +2

    8-track carts were used until the mid 2000s on Japanese buses and trains in a similar way. The "TAPE CONDUCTOR" the bus driver would press a cue button and the bus stop would be announced. Narration on one track and tones on the other, but at half speed. I have some that are dated 2005 and 2006. I repurposed some of them into custom quadraphonic tapes of new surround mixes. I always enjoy your videos, thanks.

  • @dherrendoerfer
    @dherrendoerfer Год назад +19

    They had one of these in our school library in '84, and later I saw a similar format at a driving instructor, although it had been replaced by a VCR and was just left standing there.

    • @samuelcolvin4994
      @samuelcolvin4994 Год назад +2

      That's where I remember this from too! Although I saw one sometime in 1997 or 1998.

  • @DirtyHairy1
    @DirtyHairy1 Год назад +5

    "To buy what you want" - Iron Maiden's The Number of the Beast album? Hell yes!

  • @graverboi13
    @graverboi13 Год назад +14

    As a music producer, I am constantly sampling the beautiful, vintage speech bits you play. As an audio engineer, I appreciate the wild variety of audio sources, mic angles, and occasional wobble, because there's no end of fun in resampling them later.
    Also, as an American, I had to go back and listen to you say "tutor" several times before realized that you weren't saying it wrong the first time, I was just hearing it correctly. Thanks for another gem!

  • @jrchannel7405
    @jrchannel7405 Год назад +2

    I love that little "swoosh" sound between slides, it adds some character and also brings nac your attention because you know that every time you hear it there's something new at the screen to look at

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff Год назад +3

    If you want 60Hz in the UK, many AC power-banks, e.g. Bluettti can be set to 50 or 60Hz output. No need to import from US.

  • @JimsEquipmentShed
    @JimsEquipmentShed Год назад +24

    The archived material actually looked quite good. It’s nice that it used projector styled metal belts instead of the rubber ones. Those seem to last forever.

  • @panpaletkalg2550
    @panpaletkalg2550 Год назад +1

    i like the little "swoosh" sound when the slide is changing, it's like Robocop walking in the distance

  • @Gappasaurus
    @Gappasaurus Год назад +14

    There used to be something like the Showman 16 rear-projection unit set up at our local hardware store (Rickel Home Center in NJ) when i was a kid in the ’70s that constantly looped a demonstration of some cleaning product. I’ve long since forgotten the name of the product, but the guy in the video repeats several times “Remember, it’s the _foam_ that does the work!”, and i HAVE remembered, to this very day 😆 Wish i could find that video somewhere, but haven’t been able to so far… though Mat unearthing things in the same family gives me hope 😋

    • @warphammer
      @warphammer Год назад +2

      I wonder if it was for Dow Bathroom Cleaner both because it made a big deal of the 'scrubbing bubbles' and also because you could see Dow Roofing made several of the cartridges in the first ebay auction.

  • @MikeGervasi
    @MikeGervasi Год назад +43

    On films that have "Cyan Fade" you can put a blue gel filter in front of the lens of the projector and it will somewhat restore the colors.

    • @grinningtiki220
      @grinningtiki220 Год назад +6

      Sounds a lot safer than my idea of submerging the film in a diluted blue permeant marker and alcohol solution.
      Come to think of it I have no idea what alcohol would do to the film itself.

    • @marcusdamberger
      @marcusdamberger Год назад +5

      I've often wondered how old films are restored when they look like that with the cyan and yellow fade and not much of those colors left. Somehow they must do a digital version of adding the blue gel; but turned way up with digital tools. Amazing, how much full range color they can get back from old faded color film.

    • @davidbono9359
      @davidbono9359 Год назад +16

      Or send it over to Fran Blanche 😉- she's made color-corrected video transfers from several 70's era NASA films.

    • @kbhasi
      @kbhasi Год назад +1

      From what I heard (I may be wrong), it was a result of films using "Eastmancolor" for their colour layers which (IIRC) was cheaper than the "Technicolor" system but the cyan and yellow pigments would fade out over time.

    • @smartrain1
      @smartrain1 Год назад +5

      @@marcusdamberger When films are restored they go from the original negatives rather than faded prints, only using those when the original neg materials are lost. Even so, using digital tools quite a lot of colour can be drawn out of faded film, depending on how faded it has become of course.

  • @richardthunderbay8364
    @richardthunderbay8364 Год назад +7

    I really enjoyed this one. I'm amazed that you keep on finding these new/old AV formats to present.

  • @Henchman1977
    @Henchman1977 Год назад +1

    Congratulations on the UK Postal Service using an off-the-shelf solution and not creating their own bespoke technology at enormous expense!

  • @camelcitycalamity
    @camelcitycalamity Год назад +7

    This is a very timely video! I just found one of these systems in the woods inside an old van. Next to it was Taco Bell training media. I had never seen or heard of this even though I grew up in the 80s. Thanks for showing how it worked!

  • @samsoulee
    @samsoulee Год назад +11

    Old school piracy stories are always awesome, a guy was telling how they released amiga/atari st games back in the 90s, it's so interesting. (I think it was on the retrocave youtube chanel) reusing old stamps, sending letters with a fake adress but the good return adress and so on ... lots of fun.

    • @meetoo594
      @meetoo594 Год назад +2

      That brings back memories of reusing stamps by sticking tape over them so the recipient could gently peel it off and remove the inked postal stamp thingy. Did this many times when posting pirated Amiga games to other users who did the same. Suprised the post office never got wind of the trick but I guess as it was all automated it wasnt worth the expense and hassle of checking for clear tape.

    • @owensmith7530
      @owensmith7530 Год назад

      @@meetoo594 That sort of trick is why the new stamps all have a unique barcode, each code can only be used once.

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Год назад +116

    I would say that these probably were turned off by the staff, because they likely complained to the union that they were very likely to go postal, with this repeating 24 times a day being deemed to be torture. By me the post office only had large LED displays, often only showing vounters in use, and wrong, plus the most common thing shown on them was the "Welcome to Polycomp, the date is xx/xx/xxxx, the time is yy:yy:yy, the temperature is 56C, data corrupted" as there was little chance that anybody there actually knew how to program them, and more importantly, nobody would have either the wired keyboard or IR transmitter that you needed to program them. The later ones used a Palm Pilot and software to build up the display on the Palm, and then send to the display using the IR port.

    • @Rick_Todd
      @Rick_Todd Год назад +6

      More likely the staff just turned the sound off or down to a low volume.

    • @MeriaDuck
      @MeriaDuck Год назад +12

      That 'welcome to polycomp.... Data corrupted ' message would not be misplaced in a dystopian game 😂
      And I was thinking too that waiting in line with these blaring is bad enough, one wouldn't want to be the employee working there...

    • @kenbarlow5373
      @kenbarlow5373 Год назад +5

      ​@@Rick_Todd
      I was thinking that! In fact I'm sure that the one in our city post office didn't have any narration so likely the staff had turned it down or even snipped the speaker wires so no one could turn it up again!

    • @miaugato93
      @miaugato93 Год назад +1

      I used to love those LED displays, there were even large ones on the streets, amazing how they're now delightfully obsolete

    • @niclaskarlin
      @niclaskarlin Год назад +3

      @@Rick_Todd Or someone using a screwdriver on the speaker.

  • @tapestapes0
    @tapestapes0 Год назад +1

    Matt is a national treasure at this point

  • @jakublulek3261
    @jakublulek3261 Год назад

    I remember these from the early 1990s, 1991 or 1992, when we were still living in the UK. My paternal grandmother was an post office clerk in Castle Bromwich during that time, and she used to take me with her, so I can play with stamps and papers and stuff when my mom was ill. They had that thing there and everybody hated it, especially workers because you listened to it on loop throughout the whole day. And so everybody was very happy when tape snapped off and tangled inside of that damned machine.

  • @Seiskid
    @Seiskid Год назад +5

    What a charming little story about a format I would otherwise not have noticed. Enjoyed this episode.

  • @58Brando
    @58Brando Год назад +26

    I remember being subjected to one of those in a post office.

    • @EvenTheDogAgrees
      @EvenTheDogAgrees Год назад +12

      I'm so sorry for you. I hope you're doing alright now. 😉

    • @58Brando
      @58Brando Год назад +6

      @@EvenTheDogAgrees I recovered.

    • @2760ade
      @2760ade Год назад +3

      @@58Brando I didn't. I still have nightmares!!🤣

  • @PolyesterMoustache
    @PolyesterMoustache Год назад +1

    I remember reading that 8 track tapes were used for continuous playback in malls well into the 90's before being supplanted by internet radio. They were also used for event recording on trains (similar to a black box in a plane) even more recent than that from what I've heard

  • @alistentcanada
    @alistentcanada Год назад +1

    LMFAO at the quick flash of N'Sync, a little sneaky clip.. Too funny.. What's amazing, I actually found one of these at the Thrift Shop yesterday.. I was trying to figure it out then magically this video happens. I found a rear projection unit.

  • @VidweII
    @VidweII Год назад +3

    Not often I see my tiny Kansas hometown mentioned in a Techmoan vid - 7:38.
    Not to mention the fact my father knew and worked for Bill Lear in the 70s before moving over to Beechcraft, later Raytheon.

  • @QuanticChaos1000
    @QuanticChaos1000 Год назад +5

    10:47 "But did you know that ℌ𝔈ℜ𝔈 at your local post office..."

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад

      Yeah, weird pronunciation of ‘here’.

  • @FezTheSpaceBiker
    @FezTheSpaceBiker Год назад +1

    Sending off Postal orders to your supplier of bootleg Kung Fu movies is the most Techmoan thing I've ever heard.

  • @Wolfie_Rankin
    @Wolfie_Rankin 7 месяцев назад

    When I was a kid, the teachers at our Primary School took us to the library and sat us down in front of one of these and played "Little Black Sambo" on it. We all applauded when it finished, kids tended to do that after movies back then.

  • @grahampaulkendrick7845
    @grahampaulkendrick7845 Год назад +14

    Fascinating and very nostalgic. 🙂

  • @samwalker4438
    @samwalker4438 Год назад +4

    Seeing this in the 70s/80s on a back projection screen must have looked pretty amazing, so much higher res/quality than a VHS!

  • @endruv_2287
    @endruv_2287 Год назад +1

    When you said "Commpak" I heard "Compaq" first and thought we were about to enter an even more extensive rabbit hole of computer history

  • @drumcorpshistory
    @drumcorpshistory Год назад

    Saying how this was the right tool for the job despite being outdated at that time sounds very much like how certain airlines around the world still fly pre- or post-WWII propeller driven aircraft or first generation jets, because they're extremely reliable, made to do heavy work, and can still get to places no modern aircraft is capable of. Excellent video as always Matt!

  • @AtomicShrimp
    @AtomicShrimp Год назад +4

    I remain amazed that you continue finding more formats to show to us. I was thinking that you were going to fix the speed issue by recording it and speeding it up in post, but I suppose running the machine at the wrong speed for an extended period might damage the media or the machine itself

  • @jonathannocon
    @jonathannocon Год назад +6

    I’ve never seen these thing here downunder which is surprising to me since we tend to get gizmos of all sorts in the later years of it’s production as per usual. I mean it’s still like that today tbh, especially electronic devices like this.
    Interesting device, vnoicely done & ty Mat👌🏼

  • @KenoshaHistoryCenter
    @KenoshaHistoryCenter Год назад +2

    The Kenosha History Center, a museum in Kenosha WI, received a donation of a large collection of these and two players. Ours are American Motors training material. Unfortunately, the 8 Track player component of the players need new belts and we don't have much free time to spend replacing them. They instantly reminded me of automated slideshows with sound in school in the 1980s.

    • @warphammer
      @warphammer Год назад

      Oh wow, that'd be great to see. Belts are the bane of this stuff.

  • @garethfairclough8715
    @garethfairclough8715 Год назад +2

    My dad used to work for a company that put these in. Opto electronics, as I recall, and they worked back in the 70s and 80s. They were based in Cardiff, iirc, They also did very early work on "video walls" and did some of (if not the) the very first VHS player/TV combi units. We actually still have ours, which dad may or may not have borrowed from the business when it went bust under a very nasty cloud.

  • @DeathMetalDerf
    @DeathMetalDerf Год назад +4

    Every time I watch a Tech Moan video, I feel like I've learned something I'd never have had the chance to know about. Thank you!!

  • @silarge
    @silarge Год назад +28

    Great video as always Matt.
    Seeing stamps for TV License and Road Tax brought back memories of my parents buying these each month before direct debits took over.

    • @Tommy-he7dx
      @Tommy-he7dx Год назад +4

      I had the same Flashback when a saw those stamps :)

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад

      I’d forgotten about those!

    • @nwr99nwr99
      @nwr99nwr99 Год назад +4

      Ten stamps for £1.30! We're not far off £1.30 per stamp these days

    • @hjalfi
      @hjalfi Год назад +2

      @@nwr99nwr99 Factoring in inflation, that £0.13 should now be only be £0.52, so the real price of the stamp has doubled --- most likely due to the increasing cost of delivery by humans.

  • @beez1717
    @beez1717 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love the sound the machine makes when awitching slides. It hits that geeky love for quiet electronics noises.

  • @onedeadsaint
    @onedeadsaint Год назад +1

    this feels like a classic techmoan video and it just came out. i don't really know what i mean by that; it's more of a feeling.😀

  • @TruckCentral
    @TruckCentral Год назад +4

    Just here for the Nsync reference…

  • @keithmockett3810
    @keithmockett3810 Год назад +16

    Fascinating! I am only too aware of the "colour-fade" problem on 16mm as my business includes selling 16mm movies! I really enjoy the way you appreciate technology in the context of the times! Best regards Keith

    • @bagofnails6692
      @bagofnails6692 Год назад

      Am I correct in thinking that they still used potato starch to help fix the colours during thar era ?

    • @NatureOkie
      @NatureOkie Год назад +3

      •Kodachrome (K-14?)never fades...alas, it was expensive, multistep process involving harsh chemicals. Only Kodak, and Life Magazine knew the process.
      •Kodak's E-6 Ektachrome was quick, (relatively) safe and could even be processed by amateurs, in their home darkroom.
      •I was a US Navy photographer, and we had to send our archival Kodachrome to KODAK, but, shot routine short shelf life projects on E-6 slides.

    • @ThommyofThenn
      @ThommyofThenn Год назад

      @@bagofnails6692 that would be really cool.

  • @RetroLogicLaboratory
    @RetroLogicLaboratory Год назад

    Thanks for solving a mystery for me! I couldn't remember what these machines were. In around 1982, I discovered one of these machines in the back of my Dad's Radio Shack (Tandy) store. Even then it was old technology.... There were about a dozen training cassettes with the machine- hosted by Harvey Kirck who was a famous news anchor out of Ontario I guess (he wasn't a big deal out west in Vancouver). I watched each one of the cassettes, and was glued to the funny screen, fascinated by the story-telling.
    As a 9 year old kid it was one of those strangely formative times for me that has stuck with me ever since.
    I could always remember the name "Harvey Kirck", but I couldn't remember the name of the device- "La Belle"! Thanks!

  • @MultiVogon
    @MultiVogon Год назад

    I remember when they bought in flat screen tv's to blast out advertising to people trapped in the endless post office queues. As I recall, a TV-B-GONE was a very useful thing to have in your pocket to preserve sanity ;-)

  • @darrenjackson9646
    @darrenjackson9646 Год назад +9

    Wow, Bell County High School, in Bell County, Kentucky, used these for sex Ed and home ec classes until mid 2014 when they finally got the big upgrade to that sort of curriculum in the form of, wait for it, a commercial laser disk player and a set of laser disks. What a time to be alive when I got to watch a “modern and very well funded school system” move from 1970s technology to 1980s technology, in the 21st century.

    • @darrenjackson9646
      @darrenjackson9646 Год назад

      @Philby Iasgair no they don’t still make them lmao, there’s just a ton of shitty vendors holding small southern American schools in a chokehold only selling refurbished, out of date stuff.

    • @meatpockets
      @meatpockets Год назад

      I seem to remember something like this in sex ed in the mid 90s. It was pretty outdated and kept on taking about venereal diseases instead of STDs. :D

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Год назад +1

      LD is also 1970s technology. I can't imagine why a vendor would be selling such an old system less than 10 years ago. DVDs would do the same thing but would cost the vendor less to procure. My best guess is it's something where only one specific video is approved which was only released on one format yet they still care about its copyright.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy Год назад

      Damm! The oldest tech I used in school was those old projects that you put a transparent paper and shows on the don’t what is the name.
      Also still used 90/2000 laptops that sucked until we got upgrades in 2009 and the government started giving free laptops as part technology program.

    • @FrankVannier
      @FrankVannier Год назад

      Wow, that's just like the Simpsons episode from 1998 where the computer lab is upgraded to Commodore PET styled "Coleco" brand computers, haha. Ah, America and our educational priorities, ha. 😂

  • @TSGEnt
    @TSGEnt Год назад +5

    2:46 Wow, even helped with arithmatic. How nice of them.
    Btw, Sir, you are brilliant. Over the years, being from the US, I've just delt with 50cycle stuff and digitized it, then sped it up. The thought never crossed my mind to simply pick up a battery backup source from the UK running at 50Hz in use that as my Hz converter. Thank you!
    10:58 That recording sounded a lot like David Niven!
    Thoroughly enjoyed this . Thank you.

    • @jonc4403
      @jonc4403 Год назад

      It's going to be cheaper to pick up a 12V power supply and UK inverter if you don't actually need the battery.

    • @TSGEnt
      @TSGEnt Год назад

      @@jonc4403 Indeed. Very good point.

  • @MagnaRyuuDesigns
    @MagnaRyuuDesigns Год назад +1

    The reason why those projectors are so easy to find in the US is because La Belle Industries was founded in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin in 1937 and was one of the early manufactures for M-16 magazines for the military and law enforcement. La Belle became Quest in 1993, in 1997 Quest purchased General Stamping (founded in 1975 in New Berlin, Wisconsin) and changed to D&H Industries. D&H Industries went on to become the main supplier of M-16 magazines to the Israeli Defense Force.

  • @ociemitchell
    @ociemitchell Год назад +3

    I remember using something like this in the late 70s in school, but it used a separate compact audio cassette and a film reel. And the tone to switch slides was mixed with the normal audio. This actually looks a lot more advanced in some ways.

  • @mattierenton701
    @mattierenton701 Год назад +8

    In sync... loved that... how many either missed (or saw that ) bravo Matt

  • @Jenstyler1
    @Jenstyler1 Год назад

    The parent company, La Belle, was originally about 20 miles from my hometown. Next time I'm back home in Wisconsin, I'll see if anyone I know (or their parents/grandparents) has any of these carts laying around. We actually had one of these in my elementary school library.

  • @mpersad
    @mpersad Год назад

    "Hello, I'm Frank Bough". At whatever speed, that makes me smile!😂

  • @TheWayabo
    @TheWayabo Год назад +3

    "Even a ferret can use it", best ad campaign ever lol

  • @Nielk1
    @Nielk1 Год назад +3

    It's amazing you found a cartage explaining what/why the system was.

  • @zh84
    @zh84 Год назад +1

    This is my favourite kind of content from you: an in-depth analysis of some highly obscure audio-visual device. I had no idea these things existed. Thank you.

  • @seanbergin2834
    @seanbergin2834 9 месяцев назад

    I worked behind a post office counter 1988-91 and these were introduced at the same time as the snake queue whilst I worked there, so your memory is correct.
    Previously it was single queue at each "open" window.

  • @Thermalions
    @Thermalions Год назад +4

    It wouldn't surprise me if the post office staff just subconsciously tuned it out after a while. I worked in a bank which had a very loud ATM in it's front wall with it's back exposed in the customer area inside. Customers would comment on how horrendous it must be hearing that beeping all day for every key press on the machine. But no, the staff didn't even notice it after a day or two working there. It's amazing what the brain can filter out.

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum Год назад +2

      Worked in retail with a digital display that loudly played advertisements for LG. Can confirm, you do mostly tune them out, although one of the ads always broke through that mental filter. Was glad when we finally stopped selling LG products, lol

  • @KrzysztofC-1
    @KrzysztofC-1 Год назад +3

    I'll be back for this at lunch time.

  • @button-puncher
    @button-puncher Год назад

    Sky-tron was a modern version of this in the mid-2000's. Three sided unit with rear project screens and video projectors. I installed about a dozen of these in mall food courts in the US midwest. It was about 500lbs fully assembled and hung from the ceiling. Screens were about 100'' diag. Speakers on the bottom to blast out the ads. Required a welder to put in a structural attachment point to hang them(!). A DirecTV style dish was put on the roof of the mall to receive content. Just looped ads all day long for mall rats to watch while they are their Pantera Bread sandwich and Sabarro pizza. Entire unit was constructed, installed and tested in one night from mall close to open.

  • @robinpayne125
    @robinpayne125 9 месяцев назад

    You've unlocked a memory, there was one in a UK post office I used to visit around 1990-1991. Not sure how much longer it was in use, as we moved away in '91 and that was the last time I saw one.

  • @GregBadabinski
    @GregBadabinski Год назад +9

    This is just like those damn gas pumps that blast commercials at you through their tinny, awful speakers.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  Год назад +7

      I’ve yet to encounter one of those in the U.K.
      I suspect it’s only a matter of time.

    • @christianjmoss
      @christianjmoss Год назад +3

      @@Techmoan Yeak they have started rolling these out at petrol stations in Australia, sadly it's just a matter of time :(

    • @geirmyrvagnes8718
      @geirmyrvagnes8718 Год назад

      Petrol/gasoline and diesel fuel is going out of style as well, but we will probably get something similarly awful at car chargers.

    • @GoldenCroc
      @GoldenCroc Год назад

      @@Techmoan I have seen one of those, but I dont remember where... maybe it was in Denmark? Walls are closing in....

    • @woodhonky3890
      @woodhonky3890 Год назад +1

      I have heard there is a mute button on those. Next time I go I'm going to try to find it.

  • @Absolotle
    @Absolotle Год назад +4

    I've never seen it and I still got nostalgic vibes.

  • @mikeos1
    @mikeos1 Год назад +2

    17p for first class post? Those were the days!

  • @90762709
    @90762709 Год назад +1

    Just brilliant that you got the Jackary! Problem solved!

  • @newenglisharchitecture1012
    @newenglisharchitecture1012 Год назад +8

    I've been watching your videos for a good number of years now, and I just wanted to say thank you for all the content you've made. Informative and very funny. It's brought me happiness.

  • @Rockythefishman
    @Rockythefishman Год назад +4

    Some really interesting stuff. I am sure I remember these from the post office in the late 80s. They were always too loud and the staff could not turn them down

  • @charlestaylor3195
    @charlestaylor3195 Год назад

    I used these around 1985, just prior to the pc. I used it to learn how to type at the local college. I'd check out the cartridge and have a seat at an electric typewriter with all blank keys and one of those monitor boxes, plus a set of big headphones. Also a book/pad that you would stand up and use with it. On the cutting edge of technology. Now I got the flashbacks, I also took an independant math class that used that system to teach math instead of a teacher. And it worked too, I still have those skills.

  • @mikelazarev5833
    @mikelazarev5833 9 месяцев назад

    That "death and taxes" sample is absolute gold! Definitely saving that one for some music production...

  • @billrtomison4440
    @billrtomison4440 Год назад +7

    I think our veterinarian had one of the suitcase viewers in his office. Don’t think I ever used it though!
    Fascinating stuff, Mat! ❤️

  • @igorszamaszow171
    @igorszamaszow171 Год назад +8

    Funny enough, databits has just recently released a video about a rather similar proto-power-point thing

    • @FenixQubes
      @FenixQubes Год назад +1

      That's what I was thinking, what a coincidence

  • @cujoedaman
    @cujoedaman Год назад

    Would not surprise me they were using these up into the 90's. I was in highschool in the 90's and we were STILL watching movie projector reels for educational videos from the 60's (mainly in elementary/middle school). We did have multiple TV/VCR carts too and eventually networked TV's for school related viewing. In fact, my sophomore year was the first year the computer lab spent money to get AutoDesk CAD 12. It was so new that we spent an entire school hour installing it on the computers! So we really had a very diverse set of technologies in school.

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela Год назад +2

    The post office cartridges are a great bit of history.
    Reminds me of Lenny Henry in the late 80s on one of the video ones in an episode of the Lenny Henry show.
    Be great to get hold of one of the video ones.

  • @RobTheSquire
    @RobTheSquire Год назад +5

    I remember stamps being nearly that cheap, i'm not sure if I remember if we had one of those machines in my local post office.