Without the compass, calculator, internet, etc. Isn't modern technology amazing? What would have taken a whole desktop of equipment condensed down to a smartphone.
@@JacGoudsmit gotta say you can use an internet radio app and a phone sound recorder app to do that digitally on a smartphone... And I say that as a major cassette tape enthusiast.
I'm impressed by all the functionality they threw in, somewhat surprised by what they left out...and don't think I'd want one because of the odd limitations. It seems very...busy. The outgoing announcement certainly sounds like a recording, rather than a synthesizer.
Magically tunes in 2 stations both playing songs that would have been on the radio in 1987. Magic by Olivia Newton John 1980 and Let it Whip by the Dazz band 1982.
im all for old electronics and love stuff like this, but to be honest, i dont think this is still usable... the audio quality is so poor! and nobody wants to have a noisy machine like this next to their bed when they have an all-in-one smartphone...
raafmaat, I think you have missed the point. Any mobile / cellphones from the 1980s or early 1990s stopped working in the year 2000 here in the UK. More recently my Ipad 2 struggles with many modern web sites.There is no chance of Magnavox ever making this completely unusable with an over the air software update. I don't know about other countries but in the UK a 1950s dial phone will still work.
The batteries will almost all invariably derp out within 10-15 years. (And, with the trend these days being sealed-in batteries, they won't be easy to replace if at all possible)
holy shit... I had one of these... I used it from 1998 to about 2004 when I was able to purchase my first cellphone... at 16... Yes iI used this phone at only 10 years old... I had a friend that moved several states away when I was 10 and we would call and play video games together through the phone... not online games just playing single player games and telling each other about the cool things that we found and could do... we both got our first windows xp computers in christmas of 2004 and then switched to using skype with 1mbps upload and 256kbps DSL connections... That was a different era... the phone/clock/alarm/radio was a whole different era in and of itself from before I was born... I never used the answering machine cause my mother at the time had an at&t digital answering machine model 1725... that thing was sooo cool. I think i remember calling into it and using a code to get the answering machine to play back messages...
It would include a virtual assistant, a screen of some kind, it could include an entire single board computer for other functions, a cellphone charger of some kind (maybe even wireless charging), satellite radio features, a USB connector for playing files directly, and even a CD player if you wanted something with a retro feel. (All of that should fit into that size form factor with current technologies.)
Having features permanently and prominently advertised on the unit was a very 1980s thing. You see this in audio equipment of the era a lot, it made stuff look "cool".
Awesome. Kind of a neat 80s fad back in those days where they tried to cram many different devices into one box of electronics. It's amazing how many devices have been made obsolete by "smart" phones. My old "dumb" flip phone had an FM radio that you could listen to anytime, even if there was no cell signal. When I tried to find this feature on my newer "smart" phone, I found out that all smartphones actually have the FM radio receiver functionality built-in, but the telecoms disable it so that you have to use their music apps. I guess so they can make more $ & track what you're listening to.
Yes, I remember my original HTC smartphone had a FM tuner that did work, your headphone cord was the antenna...and didn't use any data. oh, and my current phone still has a headphone jack :)
Same Magnavox (or almost same) from a thrift store 'adventure' posted on 25 March 2013. :) That video was with the Sangean/Discovery pocket radio. Love that feature to record both sides of a phone conversation, without the beeps to warn that conversation was being recorded. :)
"- Oh! What did I do last night? Bounce! The party never stops on Bounce. - It burns when I pee! The party on Bounce, Bounce, Bounce. - Damn! I gotta go to the clinic!"
Speaking of phones in the 80's and such. I remember they used sell recliner couches that came with phones in the center compartment throughout the 80's and 90's (or maybe they still do?)...
I've just bought one today (of Philips branded variety though), and apart from missing the cassette cover, it seems alright. I even plugged it in, and it works, the sad thing I couldn't find any instructions for it
I graduated high school in 81, I remember these things, I never personally had one but they were everywhere for a while. The recording of your own phone calls was a pretty cool feature! And that ring tone!! Man that brought back memories!! Thanks for the upload!
Back then, this was the kind of bedroom clock radio a business owner or professional person would have. One's livelihood often depends on punctuality, communication and news.
The answer voice sounds almost like that of Don Elliott. He's the guy who was on some early telephone announcements as well as once being the voice of WWV. Really apparent when you play the HQ version. Also, notice how far right the radio dial goes. Could that tune into the extended AM band?
As someone who likes odd mid-to-late 80's tech, this thing is amazing and I knew I had to have one. I managed to find one on eBay for $20 untested aside from power, which isn't bad for an impulse buy. I expect to have to replace the belt and maybe clean some corrosion (battery or controls), but after that, it will become my alarm clock and be my introduction to using older phones, potentially being the machine my calls get forwarded to.
Update: it arrived. And it came with a free 90 minute Type II Memorex tape inside. The controls were indeed scratchy, the cassette mech unresponsive aside from shoving the leader loosely into my test cassette, the dial was jamming, and the tuning was intermittent. The front was glued, so it was hard to get into, but I did get in without damage. The bar antenna was dislodged from the nylon holder, so I reseated it, realigned the dial, and the radio works well now. But the cassette deck is a whole nother story. There were wires galore that had to be rerouted with barely enough slack to rotate it 90° for access. And annoyingly, the belt was basically perfect. A little loose, so I will replace it at some point soon, but it's not slipping at the moment. It was actually a small translucent yellowish orange rubber gear that connects to the main flywheel/capstan to everything else that disintegrated to bits. So, I looked to see if I could find information on replacements and found nothing, not even a service manual. I don't know where to get the exact measurements and tooth count, let alone a rubbery gear, so, I looked for a parts unit and found a D7547, the model in the video without the phone, with a tested working cassette mech for $7 + shipping (extreme damage, basically unsalvageable, but the tape can supposedly play with finagling), so I just got it to swap the gears between them when it arrives. I'll also measure both rubber gears so I can share them in a Reddit post or something for others and for future reference if/when they disintegrate again.
I had a clock radio then with a cassette recorder that I could set the alarm to play the cassette. Sometimes when the cassette alarm went off with music I would dream I was playing in a band. I remember recording my voice saying " quit dreaming and wake up" repeating it multiple times because I hated the alarm and radio to wake up too.
I remember once being a clock radio with a built in tape deck that could be used as an answering machine, but it didn't have a phone built into it. I was told the microphone in said unit didn't work. I don't know who the unit was made by, but I do remember it had a red digital readout and a red tuning indicator LED. I think the reason the tape deck doesn't sound so great is because of the built in speaker more than anything. The phone ringer sounds like a cricket. It's too bad the unit can't record from the radio, that surprises me.
You're telling me... You tuned randomly to two FM station on an analog dial... And BOTH stations were playing 80s hits?!? I call shenanigans! (The first station is playing "Magic" by Olivia Newton-John from 1980 and "Let It Whip" by Dazz Band from 1982.)
Ha! I remember those from back then. If I recall many other companies made and sold these. I don't have the telephone clock radio one, but I still have a very cool GE version with cassette radio on it. And the clock LCD is rather weird, orange color backlit by an automotive side marker bulb, a 193. I've replaced it about 3 times since 92' With this one you can press play on the cassette and wake up with it. I got that way back in 1992
Ooh, i have exactly that clock radio but without the answering machine. Interestingly, it can't record but it does have the erase head in the cassette deck.
The Eighties song I thought of while watching this was "Answering Machine" by The Replacements. "How do you say, 'I miss you' to an answering machine?"
I've got a telecom brand mini cassette phone tape answering machine . It's the best thing ever. Especially when telemarketing bozos calls U only to hear a drunk guy singing never gonna give U up.
I bought my father the non-phone version of this very alarm clock (AM/FM/Cass) for father's day, silver with red LEDs, I still have the pictures (taken with my Fisher-Price 110mm camera) from the day he unwrapped it. The clock set buttons were a PITA to use. The radio reception was very impressive, and it could go pretty darn loud (although, as you noted, the speaker is craptacular). 2:43 - YUP, that's the exact model! 6:40 - I expected you to call 1-877-KARS-4-KIDS. lol I used to use Dad's alarm clock as a tape player for background music while sitting at the Macintosh Plus doing my homework. I put a *LOT* of mileage on that tape deck, and it never ate a tape, even previously-eaten tapes ran through it pretty well.
I went out and bought both and the D-7547 I got is the exact listing you showed. I'm gonna try to swap the displays, because I want the D-7549 in all red.
I remember getting home from work (in the late 1990's) and looking for the flashing light to see if I had any messages on my answering machine. No anticipation of missed calls these days kind of sad.
Heavens. We never had those here, as our GPO British Telecom were very snooty regarding what could be connected to their system. We did, however, have Philips clock radios, though with british LW/MW rather than just AM. The Magnavox you show I recall well, badged as Philips or PYE. Very interesting as always.
If someone calls you and the radio is playing and you pick up the phone. The radio mutes, If you hold that mute switch can the person who called hear the radio playing over the phone or does it switch from radio to phone? My cousin had one of these a very long time ago. That ringer reminds me of Fox Mulder's cell phone ringer.
The sticker says that because there were amplifiers that clipped on the telephone receiver for those with hearing impairments. But with this phone, such a device would prevent it from being able to hang up.
The greeting message is definetly a pcm sample, which would be perhaps8-10 bits 8khz sampling rate. I would suspect the system to use at least two chips, one for the rom, the others for the DAC and the control unit. Systems from keyboards such as the Yamaha ones and video game consoles were using already such DAC and even the old NES was able to play pcm. The only limitation was space. But this spoken greeting is really quick said... to save space...
Very cool little machine, there. That late 80s red/black/grey style is still my favorite. Isn't it about time it makes a comeback? The design cycle seems to go chrome/black/colorful, then repeat.
If I still had home telephone service I would rush out and try to find one of these. Haven't had home telephone service in about four years. It's cheaper and easier to just have a cell phone.
I love the Slugbug new wave video 😀🎹🎸 Btw, what's that old song @1:30 with female vocals?..I remember it//yet can't recall the band or title. Thanx anyone 📡
that thing is so mint looking. i noticed something theres a lot of stuff that was made in 1987 which is the year i was born December and that song couldn't have been timed any perfect lol (magic by olivia newton john 1980)
Love this. I would totally use this if I had a land line connection. Yeah we had BBC micro computers at school in the 80s which had a crude text to speech voice and it was not natural at all. When we typed in the word 'fuck' it pronounced it 'Vuuug'
Lol I just looked at my bedside table and it has a separate alarm clock, cordless telephone, and AM/FM radio 😝. Of course my other bedside table has an iPhone, iPadMini, and IPad, so I guess I’m cool there.
Landline as we know it is being replaced to VOIP is the only way now pn AT&T you can have a home phone business phone, mostly A router OS used cost less than a landline. it's nice to see vintage phones and answering machines I can remember a time we all had answering machines and a landline phone back than Than you paid for your calls you made on a landline
Zinc Chloride batteries also exist as "Heavy Duty" batteries. However, I can't see why they'd not work. Nicads, with their 7.2V output, are most likely is what it's trying to avoid.
That piercing ringer should be good enough to wake you up to answer the phone. I wonder how many automated call systems will be able to recognize the brief not-a-sine-wave tone the answering machine generates and restart the recording on the calling end. Also, why not have the hook switch in the base that also controls the radio?
The handset is the same kind that was sold as a telephone all by itself -- they advertised that it didn't need a cradle because you could "hang it up" on any flat surface. Magnavox saved some money by using an already existing part instead of designing a new one just for this model.
What does the "monitoring" button do? I guess its not similar to a monitoring feature in a call center phone where you can have a supervisor on another attached handset?
The tone ringer in that sounds rather like a GPO Trimphone, very shrill and annoying (to me at least!!), much prefer a mechanical bell ringer myself... :)
5:29 - Love how the Jersey came out of you when you said "off."
In a sense, it is like a 1987 smartphone.
Without the compass, calculator, internet, etc. Isn't modern technology amazing? What would have taken a whole desktop of equipment condensed down to a smartphone.
I just ordered voip phone number to my house. Now I need this.
Including the very modern feature of not being able to record music from the radio!
(Steve Jobs called to say Apple invented that)
@@JacGoudsmit gotta say you can use an internet radio app and a phone sound recorder app to do that digitally on a smartphone... And I say that as a major cassette tape enthusiast.
I'm impressed by all the functionality they threw in, somewhat surprised by what they left out...and don't think I'd want one because of the odd limitations. It seems very...busy.
The outgoing announcement certainly sounds like a recording, rather than a synthesizer.
Magically tunes in 2 stations both playing songs that would have been on the radio in 1987. Magic by Olivia Newton John 1980 and Let it Whip by the Dazz band 1982.
Didn't Devo Whip it?
Yes... It should be Let It Whip. Ill fix that.
30+ years old and still very usable today, I wonder how much 2018 tech will a) still work in 2049, b) be practical and relevant?
Yeah. Made to last.
im all for old electronics and love stuff like this, but to be honest, i dont think this is still usable... the audio quality is so poor! and nobody wants to have a noisy machine like this next to their bed when they have an all-in-one smartphone...
raafmaat, I think you have missed the point. Any mobile / cellphones from the 1980s or early 1990s stopped working in the year 2000 here in the UK. More recently my Ipad 2 struggles with many modern web sites.There is no chance of Magnavox ever making this completely unusable with an over the air software update. I don't know about other countries but in the UK a 1950s dial phone will still work.
@@raafmaat I wouldn't use this machine, but I do use an 80s GE clock radio every morning!
The batteries will almost all invariably derp out within 10-15 years. (And, with the trend these days being sealed-in batteries, they won't be easy to replace if at all possible)
holy shit... I had one of these... I used it from 1998 to about 2004 when I was able to purchase my first cellphone... at 16... Yes iI used this phone at only 10 years old... I had a friend that moved several states away when I was 10 and we would call and play video games together through the phone... not online games just playing single player games and telling each other about the cool things that we found and could do... we both got our first windows xp computers in christmas of 2004 and then switched to using skype with 1mbps upload and 256kbps DSL connections...
That was a different era... the phone/clock/alarm/radio was a whole different era in and of itself from before I was born... I never used the answering machine cause my mother at the time had an at&t digital answering machine model 1725... that thing was sooo cool. I think i remember calling into it and using a code to get the answering machine to play back messages...
Back to the Future called about 3 years ago.
They wanted their hoverboards back.
Mcfry you never returned my ansaphone message you are fired !lol
"Their" is a possessive term, and "there" is a term to describe a place.
I inherited one of these from my dad as a kid in the early 90s and thought it was the coolest thing ever. Glad to see it again.
I.....WANT.......THIS
2:00 The slide switch, such a staple element in clock radios... and so notoriously prone to go bad and make bad contact with time.
The handset looks like a Intellivision controller.
I wonder how many more features they could cram into one of these now. I love how VOICE SYNTHESIZE is displayed prominently.
It would include a virtual assistant, a screen of some kind, it could include an entire single board computer for other functions, a cellphone charger of some kind (maybe even wireless charging), satellite radio features, a USB connector for playing files directly, and even a CD player if you wanted something with a retro feel. (All of that should fit into that size form factor with current technologies.)
Having features permanently and prominently advertised on the unit was a very 1980s thing. You see this in audio equipment of the era a lot, it made stuff look "cool".
The nostalgia is unreal
It sure is
Awesome. Kind of a neat 80s fad back in those days where they tried to cram many different devices into one box of electronics. It's amazing how many devices have been made obsolete by "smart" phones. My old "dumb" flip phone had an FM radio that you could listen to anytime, even if there was no cell signal. When I tried to find this feature on my newer "smart" phone, I found out that all smartphones actually have the FM radio receiver functionality built-in, but the telecoms disable it so that you have to use their music apps. I guess so they can make more $ & track what you're listening to.
Yes, I remember my original HTC smartphone had a FM tuner that did work, your headphone cord was the antenna...and didn't use any data. oh, and my current phone still has a headphone jack :)
the smartphone of the 80's ... love it ! 🤩
1:29 is 'Magic' by Olivia Newton John
If you're curious
Same Magnavox (or almost same) from a thrift store 'adventure' posted on 25 March 2013. :)
That video was with the Sangean/Discovery pocket radio.
Love that feature to record both sides of a phone conversation,
without the beeps to warn that conversation was being recorded. :)
8:57... You answered the question I was going to ask. Nice anticipation of a potential question!
I kinda miss things that look like this, my mum had a radio/bedside lamp combo that looked very similar to this too.
My deskside lamp has a Qi charger in its base - that's kind of the same thing nowadays. :-P
Maybe I'm old-school, but I never go to bed without a clock/radio.
1:37 you can even listen to Bounce FM on this device.
lmao cant go wrong with San Andreas radio stations!
"- Oh! What did I do last night?
Bounce! The party never stops on Bounce.
- It burns when I pee!
The party on Bounce, Bounce, Bounce.
- Damn! I gotta go to the clinic!"
PS2 then IOS.
@@christronicsdereksrandomness36 and Scarface The World Is Yours 80's Pop.
@@Wilus0 I love that intro haha
You came across one of these in your 'Weekend thrift store adventure' from 2013, i just happened to watch it yesterday.
I called and the 1980s Awnsered AT 3AM WHILST SPINNING A FIDGET SPINNER ( NO CLICKBAIT ) I ALMOST DIED
😂
this is so sad alexa play despacito
e
Speaking of phones in the 80's and such. I remember they used sell recliner couches that came with phones in the center compartment throughout the 80's and 90's (or maybe they still do?)...
I really hope there is a video coming about that PC device in the background...the Plus Deck 2c...never knew they made a cassette deck for PCs
I have a Plus Deck, I honestly would like to hear his take on it.
I've just bought one today (of Philips branded variety though), and apart from missing the cassette cover, it seems alright. I even plugged it in, and it works, the sad thing I couldn't find any instructions for it
I graduated high school in 81, I remember these things, I never personally had one but they were everywhere for a while. The recording of your own phone calls was a pretty cool feature! And that ring tone!! Man that brought back memories!! Thanks for the upload!
Random connection: the illuminated tuning marker reminds me of a 90s chrysler head unit. The equalizer dials are lit the same way.
Wow, even in 1987 people wanted to put as much crap as possible into a phone :D
I can kind of see using this in a small office more than a bedroom with the dictation and call record features.
Back then, this was the kind of bedroom clock radio a business owner or professional person would have. One's livelihood often depends on punctuality, communication and news.
Holy shit thanks for linking that song. I cant stop listening to it
9:12 Cool that it can still record two parties calling each other (otherwise known as memo mode recording iirc)
The answer voice sounds almost like that of Don Elliott. He's the guy who was on some early telephone announcements as well as once being the voice of WWV. Really apparent when you play the HQ version.
Also, notice how far right the radio dial goes. Could that tune into the extended AM band?
Get outta here with your fake information. There have only been two World Wars.
@@Selrisitai WWV is a shortwave radio station close to Fort Collins, Colorado that tells the time.
I noticed that PC cassette deck in the background, that seems pretty interesting :)
I have the PC cassette deck, it's not too bad, converted a bunch of radio programs I recorded in the late 90's with it
RetroManCave made a video about it.
As someone who likes odd mid-to-late 80's tech, this thing is amazing and I knew I had to have one.
I managed to find one on eBay for $20 untested aside from power, which isn't bad for an impulse buy. I expect to have to replace the belt and maybe clean some corrosion (battery or controls), but after that, it will become my alarm clock and be my introduction to using older phones, potentially being the machine my calls get forwarded to.
Update: it arrived. And it came with a free 90 minute Type II Memorex tape inside.
The controls were indeed scratchy, the cassette mech unresponsive aside from shoving the leader loosely into my test cassette, the dial was jamming, and the tuning was intermittent.
The front was glued, so it was hard to get into, but I did get in without damage. The bar antenna was dislodged from the nylon holder, so I reseated it, realigned the dial, and the radio works well now.
But the cassette deck is a whole nother story. There were wires galore that had to be rerouted with barely enough slack to rotate it 90° for access. And annoyingly, the belt was basically perfect. A little loose, so I will replace it at some point soon, but it's not slipping at the moment. It was actually a small translucent yellowish orange rubber gear that connects to the main flywheel/capstan to everything else that disintegrated to bits.
So, I looked to see if I could find information on replacements and found nothing, not even a service manual. I don't know where to get the exact measurements and tooth count, let alone a rubbery gear, so, I looked for a parts unit and found a D7547, the model in the video without the phone, with a tested working cassette mech for $7 + shipping (extreme damage, basically unsalvageable, but the tape can supposedly play with finagling), so I just got it to swap the gears between them when it arrives. I'll also measure both rubber gears so I can share them in a Reddit post or something for others and for future reference if/when they disintegrate again.
I hope that PC cassette deck is next up for a video.
80's answered and now I must go - My planet needs me!
God I miss the 1980s. Time travel still possible if you took care of stuff like this!
I had a clock radio then with a cassette recorder that I could set the alarm to play the cassette. Sometimes when the cassette alarm went off with music I would dream I was playing in a band. I remember recording my voice saying " quit dreaming and wake up" repeating it multiple times because I hated the alarm and radio to wake up too.
1980 s electronics are awesome! i have love for these things
I remember once being a clock radio with a built in tape deck that could be used as an answering machine, but it didn't have a phone built into it. I was told the microphone in said unit didn't work. I don't know who the unit was made by, but I do remember it had a red digital readout and a red tuning indicator LED. I think the reason the tape deck doesn't sound so great is because of the built in speaker more than anything. The phone ringer sounds like a cricket. It's too bad the unit can't record from the radio, that surprises me.
I love this; thank you for making this video! Wish I had one of these to mess with.
You're telling me...
You tuned randomly to two FM station on an analog dial...
And BOTH stations were playing 80s hits?!?
I call shenanigans!
(The first station is playing "Magic" by Olivia Newton-John from 1980 and "Let It Whip" by Dazz Band from 1982.)
That was wonderful man I love all of the great classic songs that you played on there that clock is wonderful
Ha! I remember those from back then. If I recall many other companies made and sold these. I don't have the telephone clock radio one, but I still have a very cool GE version with cassette radio on it. And the clock LCD is rather weird, orange color backlit by an automotive side marker bulb, a 193. I've replaced it about 3 times since 92' With this one you can press play on the cassette and wake up with it. I got that way back in 1992
Ooh, i have exactly that clock radio but without the answering machine. Interestingly, it can't record but it does have the erase head in the cassette deck.
It was probably more cost effective for Philips/Magnavox to use the same transport on both units, with heads already mounted.
Pretty nice. I have a D7527... looks a little like that 7547 except has record.
I actually quite want one of those, that’s a really useful set of features. Love the ringtone, what a neat thing!
The Eighties song I thought of while watching this was "Answering Machine" by The Replacements. "How do you say, 'I miss you' to an answering machine?"
I've got a telecom brand mini cassette phone tape answering machine . It's the best thing ever. Especially when telemarketing bozos calls U only to hear a drunk guy singing never gonna give U up.
I bought my father the non-phone version of this very alarm clock (AM/FM/Cass) for father's day, silver with red LEDs, I still have the pictures (taken with my Fisher-Price 110mm camera) from the day he unwrapped it. The clock set buttons were a PITA to use. The radio reception was very impressive, and it could go pretty darn loud (although, as you noted, the speaker is craptacular).
2:43 - YUP, that's the exact model!
6:40 - I expected you to call 1-877-KARS-4-KIDS. lol
I used to use Dad's alarm clock as a tape player for background music while sitting at the Macintosh Plus doing my homework. I put a *LOT* of mileage on that tape deck, and it never ate a tape, even previously-eaten tapes ran through it pretty well.
Quite a few comments about the Plus Deck... Is that a hint of what's coming next? I have one and would love to hear your opinion of it.
Yes.
If a device told me to Slumber Off, I'd take that as an insult.
I miss the boxy look of old electronics. lol
Thanks for introducing me to Slugbug.
Sounds like a product you'd be able to pick up at your local Stereo Dust Particles, the stereo store with a whole lot more!
I went out and bought both and the D-7547 I got is the exact listing you showed. I'm gonna try to swap the displays, because I want the D-7549 in all red.
11:35 - damn I wish voice mail messages were that quick this days. No BS and the beep is like 20% the time of the beeps common now.
I remember getting home from work (in the late 1990's) and looking for the flashing light to see if I had any messages on my answering machine. No anticipation of missed calls these days kind of sad.
For whatever reason this reminds me of growing up in suburban Chicago!
Heavens. We never had those here, as our GPO British Telecom were very snooty regarding what could be connected to their system. We did, however, have Philips clock radios, though with british LW/MW rather than just AM. The Magnavox you show I recall well, badged as Philips or PYE. Very interesting as always.
If someone calls you and the radio is playing and you pick up the phone. The radio mutes, If you hold that mute switch can the person who called hear the radio playing over the phone or does it switch from radio to phone?
My cousin had one of these a very long time ago.
That ringer reminds me of Fox Mulder's cell phone ringer.
Yes, if you hold down the button you can get the radio to play while you are also using the telephone.
That’s the trick to recording the radio then.
The flashing light in the phone is for deaf people .
AussieTV except there’s a sticker that says it doesn’t doesn’t work with a hearing aid..... so thats useless.....
The sticker says that because there were amplifiers that clipped on the telephone receiver for those with hearing impairments. But with this phone, such a device would prevent it from being able to hang up.
deaf people can't use a telephone .. i'm guessing it was a joke
Is there a short tone every 15 seconds or so when recording both sides of a phone conversation? I think some states mandated that back then.
No tone.
I think this was more an unintended/undocumented function.
Very Blade Runner-ish design.
That ringer sounds like an aggressive cricket
Hello, New Jersey Bell?
The greeting message is definetly a pcm sample, which would be perhaps8-10 bits 8khz sampling rate. I would suspect the system to use at least two chips, one for the rom, the others for the DAC and the control unit. Systems from keyboards such as the Yamaha ones and video game consoles were using already such DAC and even the old NES was able to play pcm. The only limitation was space. But this spoken greeting is really quick said... to save space...
0:42 "Plus Deck 2C" I'd like to see a video about that.
We probably will soon. I don't think i noticed it last time i watched this video.
This looks awesome!!
Very cool little machine, there. That late 80s red/black/grey style is still my favorite. Isn't it about time it makes a comeback? The design cycle seems to go chrome/black/colorful, then repeat.
When I last saw the video it had 911 likes lol CALL 911 !!!
What's the song at 10:37. I've heard that song so many times and never picked up the title.
LdeinerProductions
Go all the way. By the Raspberries
Really? Didn't know it was that old. Ok. Thanks
LdeinerProductions
Ya welcome
Oh wait, I was thinking of The Rockin Berries. These guys were early 70s. That sounds about right.
Genuinely thought you'd start the video saying "I didn't want to do it but I got too lonely...", especially after the clip of the phone being dialed!
damn it i need this now. can they start producing it again?
I had this exact same model of clock as a kid.
If I still had home telephone service I would rush out and try to find one of these. Haven't had home telephone service in about four years. It's cheaper and easier to just have a cell phone.
I love the Slugbug new wave video 😀🎹🎸 Btw, what's that old song @1:30 with female vocals?..I remember it//yet can't recall the band or title. Thanx anyone 📡
Olivia Newton-John - "Magic"
If I was an adult in the 80's, that might be something I would want.
that thing is so mint looking. i noticed something theres a lot of stuff that was made in 1987 which is the year i was born December and that song couldn't have been timed any perfect lol (magic by olivia newton john 1980)
Seems like a nice bit of kit if you had it in 1987.
Love this. I would totally use this if I had a land line connection. Yeah we had BBC micro computers at school in the 80s which had a crude text to speech voice and it was not natural at all. When we typed in the word 'fuck' it pronounced it 'Vuuug'
I prefer the blue LEDs of my GE alarm clock made in the 70s with a tape deck.
I thought your intro was going to include part of the Rockford Files for a moment!
First thought - MagnaVolt: Lethal Response.
I had one of these but I couldn't figure out how to make the anwsering part work lol
Lol I just looked at my bedside table and it has a separate alarm clock, cordless telephone, and AM/FM radio 😝. Of course my other bedside table has an iPhone, iPadMini, and IPad, so I guess I’m cool there.
Cool and functional. Feature rich.
Landline as we know it is being replaced to VOIP is the only way now pn AT&T you can have a home phone business phone, mostly A router OS used cost less than a landline. it's nice to see vintage phones and answering machines I can remember a time we all had answering machines and a landline phone back than Than you paid for your calls you made on a landline
Let it Whip!
Can i ask how do you not get a copyright strike with audio in your video?
A copyright holder would have to complain, and this certainly falls under "fair use" anyway.
If you only use short clips there is little risk of getting a Content ID match, and copyright strikes are extremely rare.
I would be in trouble with my Macrovision vids and my Spin Clean "before and after" needledrop if short clips triggered a match!
So Philco and Magnavox were subsidiaries of Philips during the late 1980s?
At a time when the western electric model 500 style phone was still the standard, this must have seemed straight out of blade runner.
I liked the video purely on the title
It would be amazing if someone actually answered form the 1980s.
Zinc Chloride batteries also exist as "Heavy Duty" batteries. However, I can't see why they'd not work. Nicads, with their 7.2V output, are most likely is what it's trying to avoid.
Am I the only one who still uses a clock radio?
That piercing ringer should be good enough to wake you up to answer the phone.
I wonder how many automated call systems will be able to recognize the brief not-a-sine-wave tone the answering machine generates and restart the recording on the calling end.
Also, why not have the hook switch in the base that also controls the radio?
The handset is the same kind that was sold as a telephone all by itself -- they advertised that it didn't need a cradle because you could "hang it up" on any flat surface. Magnavox saved some money by using an already existing part instead of designing a new one just for this model.
What does the "monitoring" button do? I guess its not similar to a monitoring feature in a call center phone where you can have a supervisor on another attached handset?
The tone ringer in that sounds rather like a GPO Trimphone, very shrill and annoying (to me at least!!), much prefer a mechanical bell ringer myself... :)
"Can I use your Dictaphone?"
"No, use your finger"
If that thing has touch tone instead of a dial, that joke was already obsolete in 1987