The first ever mobile phones.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • Extra vids for Floaties! www.floatplane...
    Car Channel: / @garbagetime420
    Game Channel: / @helloimgaming
    Drum Channel: / @the.drum.thing .
    Custom iPods by Elite Obsolete: eoe.works

Комментарии • 4,6 тыс.

  • @nicoh848
    @nicoh848 3 года назад +4000

    That 30 minutes talk time for 10 HOURS of charge is such a good reminder of the progress in tech.

    • @woofle4330
      @woofle4330 3 года назад +245

      It's soon gonna be the opposite soon 30 min charge and 10 hours of battery life.

    • @lunachable1
      @lunachable1 3 года назад +310

      @@woofle4330 Already is in some phones

    • @LatteWiiU
      @LatteWiiU 3 года назад +117

      @@woofle4330 there are phones that last longer than 10 hours

    • @africanelectron751
      @africanelectron751 3 года назад +16

      My huawie does that

    • @jakeb6703
      @jakeb6703 3 года назад +18

      Give it 10 years for solid state batteries and maybe we'll get cars w that

  • @armaan_bhangoo
    @armaan_bhangoo 3 года назад +3705

    My mom always tells me the tale of how you could drop a Nokia, and it wouldn't just be fine, it would work better. Phone ain't getting reception, drop it. Phone isn't turning on, drop it. Phone is being dumb, drop kick it and it'll never act up again.

    • @maybepolly_
      @maybepolly_ 3 года назад +509

      in my family we always said "we must treat things with care" just before throwing the nokia at the wall so it worked properly

    • @AttorneyBCollins
      @AttorneyBCollins 3 года назад +343

      There's a great meme with a guy thinking,"Whenever you are feeling purposeless and unneeded, remember...someone made a protector for a Nokia 3310!" Another guy answers, "It was to protect the floor!"

    • @SpaceShitV
      @SpaceShitV 3 года назад +59

      @@AttorneyBCollins I know exactly witch one you're talking about, it's truly a wonderful meme

    • @maxklassen254
      @maxklassen254 3 года назад +15

      @@AttorneyBCollins love that joke

    • @Lambda_Ovine
      @Lambda_Ovine 3 года назад +57

      I think my mom confused me with a phone then.

  • @Zerbey
    @Zerbey 2 года назад +303

    My friend's Dad was an insurance guy and so had a car phone in the 1980s. I remember him driving me home and saying I could call my parents if I wanted to. Felt like I was in a space ship or something (thanks Philip for letting me have that experience, RIP you legend). Nowadays we take these things for granted!

    • @jaikenmainy
      @jaikenmainy Год назад +3

      69th like

    • @Zerbey
      @Zerbey Год назад +4

      @@jaikenmainy Nice.

    • @TrueRetroflection
      @TrueRetroflection 9 месяцев назад +8

      A toast to Philip--May we all become the parents with the tech our children's friends aspire to have

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 8 месяцев назад +7

      "Hey dad, guess where i'm calling from, a moving car, isn't that crazy?!"

  • @jbanks979
    @jbanks979 Год назад +307

    I just can’t even imagine the stress of actually using that thing knowing you had 30 minutes of talk time and TEN HOURS to charge it
    “Himom sorrydadsinthehosptialkthanksgottagobyeloveyou”

    • @AverageAlien
      @AverageAlien Год назад +30

      No stress at all, it wasn't really used by normal people

    • @Dvfam2000
      @Dvfam2000 Год назад +1

      Thats why you have the charging brick to put back phone on charge.

    • @Antares-dw9iv
      @Antares-dw9iv Год назад +21

      It doesn't sound like a lot, but realistically 30 minutes of mobile talk time a day is more than most people will ever need. This wouldn't have been your only phone, back then you'd almost certainly have a landline at home or in your office as well so you'd only really use this to make calls on the go and even in the time before texting 30 minutes a day seems plenty to me for that purpose.

    • @SoundShinobiYuki
      @SoundShinobiYuki 4 месяца назад +1

      Most people who had them (rich business people, basically) kept them in their car where they could charge off the car battery, landlines were still standard at home.

  • @SheKnives
    @SheKnives 3 года назад +5327

    You forget to mention the third feature. Its an effective self defense weapon! You can do some serious damage with a nugget that big.

    • @mihaiciobotaru5134
      @mihaiciobotaru5134 3 года назад +195

      Assuming you have the strength to actually throw it at the designated target

    • @sandstorm17
      @sandstorm17 3 года назад +50

      That's a lot of damage!
      -Phil Swift

    • @sandstorm17
      @sandstorm17 3 года назад +19

      That's a lot of damage!
      -Phil Swift

    • @taimaishu-nao1922
      @taimaishu-nao1922 3 года назад +33

      If you had an aluminum bodied one, you’re damn right it could!

    • @mihaiciobotaru5134
      @mihaiciobotaru5134 3 года назад +7

      @Ron 133 use it as a javelin

  • @Sleepy-oi3xh
    @Sleepy-oi3xh 3 года назад +2521

    The way he says "phones" and "head phones" literally just makes my day. I can't be mad or sad or whatever when a guy says Phonies.

    • @KookieOCE
      @KookieOCE 3 года назад +87

      Pa ho-knees

    • @peeNUTs.
      @peeNUTs. 3 года назад +38

      Also nano

    • @mr.spaceaids5379
      @mr.spaceaids5379 3 года назад +15

      The way people comments how he says phones and head phones made their day, makes my day. I cant be mad or sad or whatever when a guy enjoys a guy says phonies.

    • @catalin-constantin4197
      @catalin-constantin4197 3 года назад +1

      This video brings back memories 👍👍👍👍

    • @MistSGM
      @MistSGM 3 года назад +9

      Puh ho nies

  • @car_pal
    @car_pal 2 года назад +802

    I remember when phones were considered better when they were smaller, the smaller the more high tech the higher price. Now we are doing the opposite, the bigger the better, what a tech trip this video was hahah

    • @ItsHonski
      @ItsHonski 2 года назад +10

      Didn’t expect to see you here

    • @Danse_Macabre_125
      @Danse_Macabre_125 2 года назад +9

      Never knew you watched this

    • @KanarisTM
      @KanarisTM 2 года назад +4

      HOLY CRAP CAR PAL COMMENTED HERE?!

    • @Danse_Macabre_125
      @Danse_Macabre_125 2 года назад +1

      @@KanarisTM oh yeah

    • @o1OrangeLeopard
      @o1OrangeLeopard 2 года назад +24

      The smaller the better until you could watch videos on them.

  • @Slash27015
    @Slash27015 Год назад +137

    My grandma handed me my first phone in like 2002, a motorola micro.
    It was the size of a brick and took a credit card sized sim, and it could only do calls.
    Thanks for believing in me grandma, 10 year old me was the coolest kid on the block cause of it.

    • @PRH123
      @PRH123 10 месяцев назад +5

      You and your grammy were way behind the times, in '02 phones were the size of credit cards... GSM phones in Europe + world anyway....

  • @SkulShurtugalTCG
    @SkulShurtugalTCG 3 года назад +2644

    Which came first: The Chicken or the Nugget?

  • @piorun7903
    @piorun7903 3 года назад +2407

    Ahh yes.
    Back when the "mobile" phones were literally bricks.
    Good times.

    • @piorun7903
      @piorun7903 3 года назад +2

      @Ok Jesus christ i thought that was a screamer link for a second lol

    • @PizzaPowerXYZ
      @PizzaPowerXYZ 3 года назад +11

      @@piorun7903 it is
      That's a bot

    • @kyliandc9276
      @kyliandc9276 3 года назад +9

      I remember reading at school a detective book (maybe Goosebumps ? ) where a girl was murdered and the weapon was actually a mobile phone (she got knocked on the head and made a seizure). Being from the late 90's it only made sense years after when i discovered these kind of phones

    • @thedoge7182
      @thedoge7182 3 года назад +1

      More like *NUGGETS*

    • @vladipeace
      @vladipeace 3 года назад +8

      @cruising ik u have a reason to say that but 1- stop assuming, 2- most bfdi fans ive met are born at around 2001-2008, if they’re from the beginning then they’re even older because the 1st bfdi episode was released on new years 2010 and 3- whats so bad about being born in 2011?nobody can control their age 😐

  • @scott1564
    @scott1564 Год назад +30

    I almost bought a "brick" phone back around 1990. They had come down in price to around the mid to high 3 figures by then. I couldn't really justify it, so I passed. My dad bought a portable version -- the one that "hung up," had a handle on it and could be carried around. I'd say it was about the size of a large day planner. I don't know how much it cost but the monthly fee was around $30-35 just for the service and then there were per minute charges on top of that -- no "free" minutes as I recall. The first cell phone I actually got was something from Radio Shack around 1993. It wasn't small enough to put in my pocket, but it was much closer to the size of the Nokia (it wasn't that brand, but I forgot what it was). It cost me a penny for the phone (!!) and again, something like $25 or 30 a month, but you got 100 or so minutes included. It wasn't until Sprint PCS, what I believe to be the precursor to 2G or the digital network, came out around 1997 that the service fees covered a fair amount of minutes and later texts. I think the funny thing is, I now keep my iPhones much longer than I ever kept any early gen cell or PCS phone in spite of the rapid changing tech of the newer smart phones. Pretty much 4 years minimum now; going to keep my XS for 5 or until they go USB-C on the port.

    • @nikkiofthevalley
      @nikkiofthevalley 6 месяцев назад +1

      The thing is, it isn't rapidly changing. It's just marketing and small features at this point.

  • @JessAWeeb
    @JessAWeeb 2 года назад +23

    My great grandma had a phone similar to the first brick. It came in a foam briefcase and had a huge thick charger cable. I only got to see it a couple of times, never got to use it, since it was very precious to her and she was convinced that portable phones would be very useful. She was right.

  • @therealkzero
    @therealkzero 3 года назад +572

    To be fair, having one of these in the mid 80's, INSTANTLY made you the most important person in a 10 block radius. I remember seeing a gentleman walk into the local mall with one...and i'm not joking when I say everyone stopped everything they were doing to stare. It was like seeing Michael Jackson in person. The world around him just stopped while he walked by. Insane.

    • @AbhijeetKumar-cm3jh
      @AbhijeetKumar-cm3jh 3 года назад +90

      I mean, having the power the hold a 10,000 dollar brick in your hand, almost makes you a celebrity.

    • @spiderpickle3255
      @spiderpickle3255 2 года назад +48

      It extended past the 80's too. When I was a kid in the early mid 90's dad brought home a couple discarded MicroTACs that still had working batteries. They didn't have service but still worked for emergency calls, which was enough excuse for me to carry one around and act important. Got similar reactions to what you described because in the 90's it was unheard of to see a 10 year old with a cell phone (even though pagers were common with kids at the time) and still rare to see an adult not wearing a suit with one.

    • @mr.fahrenheit7009
      @mr.fahrenheit7009 2 года назад +3

      I have 2 if only it was the 80s

    • @jackieburkhart3268
      @jackieburkhart3268 2 года назад +11

      i mean, if you carry one of those nowadays, people will look at you lmao

    • @danimayb
      @danimayb 2 года назад

      @@spiderpickle3255 Yeah I guess that's true lol. I'd say by late 90s is when cell phones started to become somewhat popular across society and ages, With the introduction of PAYG package handsets that cost around 100-130 bux. I bought my first one in 1997 on my 17th birthday which was a Motorola D160 And have always had a cell phone since! Those Nokia phones during the 2000s were great fun aha

  • @DeadlyDanDaMan
    @DeadlyDanDaMan 3 года назад +1509

    People really don't appreciate how incredibly far the miniaturization of technology has come over the last 40 years. It's absolutely ridiculous.

    • @Liggliluff
      @Liggliluff 3 года назад +5

      Well, the miniaturisation happened with in the first ... few years? But since the brick phones, it hasn't gotten much smaller.

    • @licht4808
      @licht4808 3 года назад +97

      @@Liggliluff no, you're underselling it.
      we have 5nm transistors these days. the iphone just a couple of years ago only had 16GB as its max storage option.
      your comment is wrong.

    • @discopotato4673
      @discopotato4673 3 года назад +62

      @@Liggliluff Oh man, that's just the size you hold in your hand. Now consider this, we went from handheld resolution of 96x32 pixels to a full fledged 1440x3200 pixels on a modern flagship in these years and that's just 1 spec. To put that in comparative numbers, that's an increase of 149,900% in terms of just pixels.

    • @gp75motorsports
      @gp75motorsports 3 года назад +46

      @@discopotato4673 And don't forget all the stuff modern phones have. Not only the huge screens, but also basically entire computer systems built right into something that can fit in your pocket. A CPU with integrated graphics, haptic feedback motors, a touchscreen, solid-state storage, RAM, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi... Whereas, if you wanted a cell phone in 1988, you'd have to drop the 2021 equivalent of $10,000 on a gigantic brick that lasted 30 minutes per call, had to recharge for 10 hours and whose fanciest feature was being able to store 30 numbers. We've come such a damn long way in such a relatively short amount of time.

    • @discopotato4673
      @discopotato4673 3 года назад +5

      @@gp75motorsports Yee, I was just putting in one spec as comparison otherwise I'd start babbling about how cool tech has become.

  • @federicovicente8116
    @federicovicente8116 Год назад +21

    I just love the enthusiasm in your voice, really authentic in presenting such a brick.

  • @lukabitheredfox
    @lukabitheredfox Год назад +10

    When he said “Ugh, stupid 80s”, I cracked up.😂 3:10 is when he says it

  • @360NoHope_
    @360NoHope_ 3 года назад +341

    “so does a can of pepsi” don’t give me ideas while i’m drinking pepsi

    • @squerlicious
      @squerlicious 3 года назад +18

      @Project X Main too late cops called

    • @simonarnback6547
      @simonarnback6547 3 года назад +6

      @Project X Main FBI OPEN UP!

    • @johnynoway9127
      @johnynoway9127 3 года назад +2

      damn.... i dont need to make or buy bombs...
      all i ever needed was a bunch of cans and light em up n throw.
      nvm...
      its called molotov

    • @Denis7947.
      @Denis7947. 3 месяца назад

      Pepsi + mentos💀

  • @sirsavagethe21st56
    @sirsavagethe21st56 3 года назад +890

    I've heard stories about people moving bricks in the 80's they were not kidding.

    • @SheepDavidofun
      @SheepDavidofun 3 года назад +44

      escobar used to sell so many motorolas

    • @TopherBinx
      @TopherBinx 3 года назад +4

      I don't think you...
      Wait.
      You're probably right.

    • @Carriesue1982
      @Carriesue1982 3 года назад +6

      As someone born in the early 80’s thank you for making me feel ancient today lol

    • @nightcrawler2717
      @nightcrawler2717 3 года назад +4

      Tony Montana owned one of these

    • @alexcharles8541
      @alexcharles8541 3 года назад +3

      You win the Internet today. Have a beer 🍺

  • @peppyrobo7049
    @peppyrobo7049 2 года назад +8

    Okay WOW! The fact this came out in 1983 while the Walkman came out in 1979 really makes me respect how forward Sony was with their tech and I can totally see the portability of that cassette player even more now in comparison (and yes I know one is a phone and one isn’t but like still)

  • @RevRod92
    @RevRod92 Год назад +7

    The second phone you showed was like my grandpa's cell phone for his business. We even had walkie-talkies that looked like it. They were the best to play with and I still miss them tbh.

  • @eurobeatfan8718
    @eurobeatfan8718 3 года назад +956

    "Can I borrow your phone?"
    "Yeah, sure!"
    "Hang on, this is a brick, not a phone"
    "Exactly!"

    • @stopsign2594
      @stopsign2594 3 года назад +5

      Nah it’s a giant nugget

    • @eurobeatfan8718
      @eurobeatfan8718 3 года назад +1

      "You are meant to play pretend with the brick"

    • @stopsign2594
      @stopsign2594 3 года назад

      @@eurobeatfan8718 brick* i meant

    • @darthXreven
      @darthXreven 3 года назад +1

      can I use your brick as the cornerstone if this new high rise I'm building??

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei Год назад

      And that's why they are called brick phones.

  • @Kairos-XIII-2
    @Kairos-XIII-2 3 года назад +433

    Taking a call from that melted all chocolate bars in a 3 meter radius

  • @leadpoisoning717
    @leadpoisoning717 2 года назад +11

    I had completely forgotten how impossible it used to be to open battery covers

    • @katrinabryce
      @katrinabryce Год назад +2

      And nowadays you need a heat gun to open them.

  • @PhirePhlame
    @PhirePhlame Год назад +3

    I've got a gold Motorola Bagphone as well as one of Technophone's competitors. Both are only the car kit, but both surprisingly work when plugged in! The latter even has a little light in the post of its car plug to let you know it's getting power!

  • @elijahwilliams7791
    @elijahwilliams7791 3 года назад +201

    You shouting out cube runner makes me feel so valid.... As the world record holder for 3 of the 4 Cube Runner modes.

  • @ulischmidt03
    @ulischmidt03 3 года назад +255

    that thing ain’t a nugget, that thing is the whole chicken!

    • @unliving_ball_of_gas
      @unliving_ball_of_gas 3 года назад +8

      {insert funny reply}

    • @RimuKora
      @RimuKora 3 года назад +6

      @@unliving_ball_of_gas {insert laugh soundtrack}

    • @eye5448
      @eye5448 3 года назад +7

      @@RimuKora {insert unexpected adult scene}

  • @ryanjcurran2
    @ryanjcurran2 2 года назад +5

    I've been restarting this video for "PA-HO-NEEZ" and I may never be able to stop

  • @benjamindodge6078
    @benjamindodge6078 Год назад +2

    At 8:05 when dank says "it's got the dad case", it just sounds nice

  • @decipher111
    @decipher111 3 года назад +439

    Looks like you’re holding technologically advanced sandwiches

  • @just-jaden
    @just-jaden 3 года назад +215

    To think that the cell phones back then we’re literally bricks and can only take calls, while today’s phones are literal mobile smart computers being able to do almost everything.

    • @wlj
      @wlj 3 года назад +16

      back when to store 4mb you needed a room

    • @lululock
      @lululock 3 года назад +10

      When I was a kid (2004), I dreamed about people having really tiny foldable computers fitting in their pockets... Well, mine isn't foldable but is basically a computer fitting in my pocket, so I guess my childhood dream came true ?

    • @wyvern4588
      @wyvern4588 3 года назад +1

      @@lululock We were almost there already when the Razr phone came out in 2004, all the cool kids had them, as a poor freshman I had no phone, but eventually got a really shitty dumb-phone in 2006- with *gasp* mobile internet.

    • @tristan6509
      @tristan6509 3 года назад +2

      @@wlj nope you're bullshitting. back in 80s floppy disks exists and you'd need a dozen 360k disks or 6 double sided 5 inc floppies for 4mb.

    • @dyl7769
      @dyl7769 3 года назад

      @@tristan6509 you do realize the computer was created out of vacuum tubes originally. And each tube acted as a singular bit. Hence 1,024 being needed for a kilobit. And 1,048,576 being needed for a singular mega bit. Now considering there's 8 bits in a byte and we are talking megabytes we would need 32x the vacuum tubes. So in other words it would take more than likely several miles^cubed of space to occupy this many vacuum tubes.

  • @christopherbrown9069
    @christopherbrown9069 Год назад +9

    As a kid in the 80s and 90s, I remember every one of these. Good memories.

  • @Stefan-
    @Stefan- Год назад +3

    I used to repair these professionally in the 90´s here in Sweden, well at least the Micro tacs and the Dynatac which was very similar in style to the first Motorola that you showed but a bit slimmer, the model i probably repaired most during the 5 years i worked repairing mobile phones was the very popular Nokia 2110. What you are talking about though is the first handheld mobile phones, mobile phones actually dates back to the first half of the 1900´s and Sweden apparently had the first fully automated mobile phone system in 1956 named MTA which was for vehicles since they werent portable. I worked on NMT (analog) and GSM phones (digital and on its way out now at least here in Sweden).

  • @itsandre97
    @itsandre97 3 года назад +161

    Every call with this nugget is equal to a chest x-ray probably

    • @ulischmidt03
      @ulischmidt03 3 года назад +15

      I don’t think you know how phones work

    • @lastfirst5863
      @lastfirst5863 3 года назад +2

      Battery is ncad not lithium ion, it doesn’t have that much juice.

    • @nanonymous9139
      @nanonymous9139 3 года назад +4

      Not great, not terrible.

    • @DibIrken
      @DibIrken 3 года назад +1

      Uhhh..this doesn't emit radiation like smartphones do.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 3 года назад

      Good old 450 MHz C-net

  • @interdimensionalemployee1117
    @interdimensionalemployee1117 3 года назад +269

    “So boss we should use all the space we have left in our new phone, maybe so the battery can last longer?”
    “No Fred you’re fired. the battery will last 30 minutes, and if you ever bring this up again we’ll sue you”

    • @TheGuyWhoIsSitting
      @TheGuyWhoIsSitting 3 года назад +27

      I mean, for the time, they probably had a bunch of trouble trying to figure it out. I know some of the "mobile" phones had basically battery backpacks you had to wear to use them.

    • @trevor245
      @trevor245 3 года назад +25

      The battery is that big it's just that the technology wasn't there yet so they needed that much space for 30 minutes.

    • @VulpesHilarianus
      @VulpesHilarianus 3 года назад +16

      The power consumption to battery level on these was pretty abysmal. The best batteries for the nickel-cadmium ones if I remember were like 750mAh. Even the shittiest lithium-ion battery holds 1200mAh today. You're also running that at 6A, which is more power consumption than a microwave oven.
      The other thing is they had an entire physical modem shoved in there. There wasn't any software emulation as a shortcut at all like later phones.

    • @JaredConnell
      @JaredConnell 3 года назад +7

      All the space left? There was basically no space left that they could use for a battery. Even if they could somehow make a battery that fit around all the components it would last maybe a few seconds more anyways.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 3 года назад

      6A must be a massive, industrial microwave. Mine doesn't even hit 4A on full power.
      But if we go by voltage, those brick phones probably run on 6V, or even 9V, that would be 36-54W on 6A

  • @dylanjimenez-stevens
    @dylanjimenez-stevens 4 месяца назад +2

    0:03 I need a 1 hour replay of that its just a master piece

  • @A-G-F-
    @A-G-F- Год назад +2

    6:24 i really love when sellers do these kinds of stuff, is just neat and makes you happy about buying that particular listing

  • @jessehenderson9864
    @jessehenderson9864 3 года назад +449

    My pre-K teacher in 2007 had a microTAC that was a “toy” phone, she also had other various old big Motorola phones for us to play with

    • @f.b.i9524
      @f.b.i9524 2 года назад +7

      Thats sad, I would have LOVED one

    • @ab.3800
      @ab.3800 2 года назад +3

      they where made to look like a vw harlequin

    • @AlexYeets
      @AlexYeets 2 года назад +3

      @@ab.3800 Legendary, though I think a little obscure of a reference. :P

    • @Danse_Macabre_125
      @Danse_Macabre_125 2 года назад +1

      @@AlexYeetsLike 5 people watching this know the reference

    • @1_Vinity
      @1_Vinity 2 года назад +1

      I'm sure the kids probably flushed the phones down a toilet

  • @akhil_kasiram
    @akhil_kasiram 3 года назад +121

    Everyone: making videos about the nothing ear ones
    Dank pods: pa ho nee

  • @moconnell663
    @moconnell663 Год назад +1

    The reason they have such strong warnings about not disposing of the battery in fire is that once upon a time, in an era before even alkaline batteries were common, the zinc-carbon batteries of the day were safe to dispose of by burning them with the rest of your trash.

  • @armadussteel2489
    @armadussteel2489 2 года назад +1

    One of my grandfather's old employers gave him 3 of those bricks when he was working for them. He was the accountant for some huge company that my brain has forgotten cause he told me this in like 2011. Anyways he was so important to the company that they needed some way to contact him no matter what. He doesn't have the bricks anymore but he has pictures of them in the backround on their chargers.

    • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated
      @DissociatedWomenIncorporated 2 года назад

      Sounds like you may have a worse memory than your grandpa, and less of a legit excuse for it!

  • @jack_2000
    @jack_2000 3 года назад +807

    All jokes aside, it's amazing you've got these, they really are pieces of portable technology and communications history. They'll fit right alongside the Craigs

  • @woolfieMcP
    @woolfieMcP 3 года назад +257

    Back when "bricked phone" meant your phone was a literal brick

    • @fantastiday5984
      @fantastiday5984 3 года назад +5

      I know this is irrelevant but I remember when playing GTA Vice City that Tommy use a similar phone like in the video considering that the game take place in 1986.

    • @jackmartin6502
      @jackmartin6502 3 года назад +2

      @@fantastiday5984 CJ uses it in San Andreas too

    • @bujablaster
      @bujablaster 3 года назад +2

      Nope. It actually had real physical meaning - phone of that size and weight became brick if something wrong happened to it. Today "bricked phone" is just poor resemblance of what it did really mean then :).

    • @nopeitwasepilepsy4616
      @nopeitwasepilepsy4616 3 года назад

      There are still brick phones today not that they are as big as a brick but they are as tough as a brick

    • @fynkozari9271
      @fynkozari9271 3 года назад

      In the future, current smartphones gonna look ridiculous. Compared to the future technology phones.

  • @ifl-_-
    @ifl-_- 2 года назад +2

    3:40 he went from excitement to sadness to anger to joy in 5 seconds

  • @pete6705
    @pete6705 Год назад +3

    I remember when I was a kid, long time ago, and I saw the first mobile phones start to come out. They were the most baller things you could have, I thought anyone who had one was some kind of Wall Street CEO, or at least someone very important

  • @JTSuarez
    @JTSuarez 3 года назад +144

    That brick could replace the 1grit™

    • @SpaceShitV
      @SpaceShitV 3 года назад +8

      Nothing can get in the way of the
      (Drumroll)
      1BRICK

    • @deathsyth8888
      @deathsyth8888 3 года назад +13

      At least 1 Grit gives things a fighting chance. The big chungus Motorola mobile phone? It would completely crush things in an instant. Where's the sport in that?

    • @TheBlargMarg
      @TheBlargMarg 3 года назад +5

      That brick could "one grit" the one grit

    • @datutturugang666
      @datutturugang666 3 года назад +1

      nah, that’s the 1GRIT™️’s phone

    • @thelaxsoviet5922
      @thelaxsoviet5922 3 года назад +1

      nothing can replace 1 grit

  • @igotes
    @igotes 3 года назад +372

    My uncle gave me his old cell phone he had in his truck, from the late 80s. It was the size of a small suitcase and weighed something like 4 kilos. 6210 was my first phone too, I had to pay for it myself and all, no wealthy dad here!

    • @matthewjbauer1990
      @matthewjbauer1990 3 года назад +19

      My grandpa gave me the briefcase phone he used to have in his Lincoln in the 80s. Also, he gave me his "portable" backpack phone he used before that. I don't remember what happened to them, but I wish we had kept them if we didn't because they are worth something now (collectors items).

    • @TheMadTatter
      @TheMadTatter 3 года назад +6

      My old man also had a briefcase phone when he was a recovery driver, that toonwas Motorola and the briefcase-sized meant it had a huge speaker and microphone in it which allowed it to be hands free on the road.

    • @MichaelEricMenk
      @MichaelEricMenk 3 года назад +7

      I remember when we upgraded from the phone we bought in the mid 70s. The brochure.. It stated :
      "The new light weight from Panasonic, only 4.6kg. Now so light that you can take it with everywhere"
      And it was a picture of the phone hanging from a golf bag.
      And compared with the phone from the mid 70s, yes it was light weight...

    • @Nadia1989
      @Nadia1989 3 года назад +1

      One of those is used for decoration at a restaurant I use to go. You could kill someone with it.

    • @jackbauer4762
      @jackbauer4762 3 года назад +3

      Still a wealthy uncle who could give away the model in the first place

  • @marshallguerra1353
    @marshallguerra1353 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wow !! I was in the cell phone business from 1987 until 2000. I have installed and sold as well as serviced all the phones in your video. Thanks for taking me down memory lane.

  • @salmonsoup15
    @salmonsoup15 Год назад +2

    This was the first dankpods video I watched, and now I’m a patreon, and celebrate every upload.

    • @salmonsoup15
      @salmonsoup15 Год назад

      i was just about to comment a comment i already commented, i think i have brain loss

    • @Piano_Board
      @Piano_Board 5 месяцев назад

      cool XDDDD

  • @thatoneguyithink4731
    @thatoneguyithink4731 3 года назад +61

    it's pretty amazing when you think about it: the phone was invented in the late 19th centery (1876 right?) so it took 100 years to make them moblie, but only 40 to make them one of the most advanced and powerful machines that all of us use everyday

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 3 года назад +8

      afaik before there were cellphones like that, they already did "mobile" phones, that were basically suitcases that can call, during the 50's. Also available as car phones.
      A bit like the first portable computers, where portable meant that one person can carry them.
      Oh, I just read they did some early things during WWI

    • @thatoneguyithink4731
      @thatoneguyithink4731 3 года назад

      @@HappyBeezerStudios guess I should have paid more attention in history class

    • @aidanely
      @aidanely 3 года назад +3

      And only 15 years to make them a touchscreen and in everyone’s pockets after that

  • @Zainalii._
    @Zainalii._ 3 года назад +267

    I cant wait for you to make a video on the new "nothing ear(1)" because ngl all the reviews look kinda fake because I have never seen a device getting such constant positive reviews. So i would love to see a review from you

    • @gentlemansfrog8587
      @gentlemansfrog8587 3 года назад +2

      Same

    • @NordriOfUthgard
      @NordriOfUthgard 3 года назад +25

      "Don't go beyond about 2/3 of the max volume, it gets really distorted beyond that" doesn't exactly count as positive but yrah other than that it's all pretty positive. Which screams SUS to me.

    • @Imjamfras
      @Imjamfras 3 года назад

      Yeah

    • @Purpiii
      @Purpiii 3 года назад +9

      I'm only seeing reviews from tech enthusiasts who only care about features and not so much about audio

    • @adnvdn
      @adnvdn 3 года назад +27

      MKBHD made a review and he criticize the battery life and audio quality. Based on his review, it basically has the same audio quality as Ray's con or equivalent

  • @FinnGreenland
    @FinnGreenland 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact! Jeremy Mark Berg was founding director of the University of Pittsburgh Institute for Personalized Medicine. He holds positions as Associate Senior Vice Chancellor for Science Strategy and Planning and Professor of Computational and Systems Biology at the University of Pittsburgh.

  • @valqr_1252
    @valqr_1252 2 года назад +3

    9:00 Rare footage of Dank saying "battery" and not "bat-tree"

  • @ovvvven
    @ovvvven 3 года назад +157

    That ain’t no nugget. That’s a whole-ass chicken.

    • @unliving_ball_of_gas
      @unliving_ball_of_gas 3 года назад +2

      Stolen. The same comment is right on top

    • @stranger4407
      @stranger4407 3 года назад

      @@unliving_ball_of_gas yeah lmao

    • @ovvvven
      @ovvvven 3 года назад

      @@unliving_ball_of_gas My comment was made at the same time as his. Also, even if I did see his comment first, it wasn’t stolen. The joke that I made used the same word play but in a different format. Stolen would be if I copied it word for word.

    • @eye5448
      @eye5448 3 года назад +1

      Stolen comment! We got a stolen comment here guys! Don't thumbs up his comment because it's stolen, everybody!

    • @ovvvven
      @ovvvven 3 года назад

      @@eye5448 Oh, really? It’s stolen? I’m disliking it. Thanks for the advice!

  • @Mr.White1
    @Mr.White1 3 года назад +302

    I remember my dad’s lawyer coming to our house with a portable phone. A box about the size of an iPad, a handle on the top and a phone receiver. I was too little, not sure what brand it was.

    • @shayneoneill1506
      @shayneoneill1506 3 года назад +49

      My dad was a Telephone linesman and had one of these chonkers in his car. Back in the 80s we thought it was goddamn star trek technology.

    • @fivish
      @fivish 2 года назад +10

      There were several transportable phones which had brick size batteries and the handset with wiggly chord and of course a 10 Watt transmitter.

    • @iggy151
      @iggy151 2 года назад +13

      That was probably a Motorola bag phone

  • @aidanb7691
    @aidanb7691 Год назад +7

    1:26 A meme that gamers can relate to

  • @sandakureva
    @sandakureva Год назад +1

    My old man actually had one of these flip-nuggets back in like, 1991. His company let him borrow it since they always had him traveling around.

  • @izzie9526
    @izzie9526 3 года назад +353

    "May explode if disposed of in a fire"
    "Well so do Pepsi cans but they don't have that warning"

    • @frankiethebull8269
      @frankiethebull8269 3 года назад +12

      Pepsi cans explode when they freeze too lol....and so will batteries.

    • @stablow4291
      @stablow4291 3 года назад +1

      yes he said that no need toi comment that dumbass

    • @partIycIoudy
      @partIycIoudy 3 года назад +20

      @@stablow4291 who pissed in your cereal?

    • @ibethatgoldfishmf
      @ibethatgoldfishmf 3 года назад +1

      The battery do be flatter than a tire with a nail in it

    • @karotgamin790
      @karotgamin790 3 года назад +2

      @@partIycIoudy me

  • @Vvv-mb8vv
    @Vvv-mb8vv 3 года назад +192

    CJ been holding this thing in his pocket, just saying.

    • @edwardthehazardous1524
      @edwardthehazardous1524 3 года назад +12

      Don't forget Tommy!

    • @geraldchurchill5576
      @geraldchurchill5576 3 года назад +18

      San Andreas takes place in the early 90s, cell phones in the early 90s were a bit more manageable, at least compared to this.

    • @hiralykowalski6825
      @hiralykowalski6825 3 года назад +16

      He also carry Rocket Launcher
      That's nothing for him

    • @mrbdwastaken
      @mrbdwastaken 3 года назад +3

      @@geraldchurchill5576 he still has a brick for a phone cuz he’s from the ghetto

    • @aibalta6340
      @aibalta6340 3 года назад

      Wym pocket?

  • @davefish8107
    @davefish8107 4 месяца назад +2

    I had the brick back in 1987 , absolutely useless. You were lucky to get 5 words out before you lost the signal if you wasn’t in a major city

  • @cryptocoder5553
    @cryptocoder5553 Год назад +1

    "So, features, it makes calls, ...wha? That's it. I just- I just told you the features."

  • @ActualCharky
    @ActualCharky 3 года назад +92

    You've made me realise there are kids who DIDN'T start with their dad's hand-me-down phone and that's terrifying

    • @JamienautMark2
      @JamienautMark2 3 года назад +8

      I mean most kids my age had a phone by 6/7th grade but I got one when I went off to college. And that was awhile ago now. Kids now have them by elementary school.

    • @paradise_valley
      @paradise_valley 3 года назад +3

      All the phones I’ve used my entire life, except my first Nokia, have been my dad’s hand me downs. You can never go wrong cuz I always end up with a good phone. I doubt my parents would be willing to do it any other way. More people should make less electronic waste by just doing stuff like this. It’s a shame Apple and Samsung don’t allow you to replace batteries that easily anymore.

    • @cameronaberner
      @cameronaberner 3 года назад +2

      I didn't, but that because I bought my first cell phone myself when I started working so that work could call me. I always regretted that decision.

    • @vstev3472
      @vstev3472 3 года назад +1

      My dad never give me any hand-me-down so yeah :)

    • @ActualCharky
      @ActualCharky 3 года назад

      @@JamienautMark2 I had one when I was 10 or 11, but it was definitely just my dad's old 3310 in a doctor who shell. I was quite a vulnerable kids so my parents wanted to make sure I could contact them I think. I definitely wouldn't have got a brand new smartphone at that age.. if they'd existed...

  • @metraforce441
    @metraforce441 3 года назад +196

    *Just imagine how old and outdated our current phones will be after a few decades*

    • @sachensager8476
      @sachensager8476 3 года назад +5

      In ten years smartphones wont exist like now

    • @LatteWiiU
      @LatteWiiU 3 года назад +1

      @@sachensager8476 how

    • @albinhaformiga1070
      @albinhaformiga1070 3 года назад +2

      Yeah is both interesting and quite scary

    • @georgemanize
      @georgemanize 3 года назад +13

      Nah technology in general has hit plateau since the mid 2000s. A future phone would just have better specs but it won't be something crazy that belongs in a scifi film.

    • @NoFeckingNamesLeft
      @NoFeckingNamesLeft 3 года назад +6

      @@sachensager8476 There’s a very direct line from the phones in this vid to the ones now. Smaller, more features, better battery etc but they’re still fundamentally the same concept just with incremental improvements, and over the previous decade their design hasn’t even evolved much. It’s a bit silly to think another ten years will somehow fundamentally change the device.

  • @Hispandinavian
    @Hispandinavian Год назад

    I remember those TV shows as a kid, where the big man is sitting poolside and the butler is bringing the brick phone on a tray.

  • @eduardosantabaya5348
    @eduardosantabaya5348 Год назад +6

    First mobile with SMS was Nokia 2160 (or Technophone 805), There were 2 models of StarTAC, the 3000 w/o SMS and the 7000 with all features, you forgot to show the "suitcase" Motorola 🤣🤣🤣, best antenna ever.

  • @rowni
    @rowni 3 года назад +269

    "This is how they keep the weaklings off Wall Street" LMAOOO xD

  • @ColaAnimates
    @ColaAnimates 3 года назад +39

    Screaming Aussie man is now a phone reviewer, nice

  • @aserta
    @aserta 2 года назад +6

    4:25 Mate, stop grabbing Jay Leno by his chin, that's disrespectful.

  • @T1RACER
    @T1RACER Год назад +1

    4:40. You pressed it from the wrong side. When you press it verticaly into the phone and then push the accu downwards then it will slide out easily.

  • @the_teckeroo
    @the_teckeroo 3 года назад +68

    The warning should have been “Warning: battery may explode if exposed to fire or a can of Pepsi.”

  • @deadmansteely
    @deadmansteely 3 года назад +355

    Everytime Dank Pods uploads world happiness meter goes up

  • @jozsiolah1435
    @jozsiolah1435 Год назад +1

    The older phones supported 14.4 kbit/s high speed data transfer, full duplex mode. The trick is 1-2 hours net, browsing, and the 9.6 kbit/s slow data transfer will switch permanently to 14.4 kbit/s. That was fast with Win 98, because everything used the internet cache, instead of loading from the network.

  • @rjyadventures
    @rjyadventures Год назад +1

    The credit card sized sim cards were just as funny back then aswell.

  • @mothman7430
    @mothman7430 3 года назад +62

    "Dad case" is the best name for these cases.

  • @bananaassasin7514
    @bananaassasin7514 3 года назад +92

    Genuine leather comes from the worst.part of the hide that's why it tends to be really cheap

    • @amichiganboiwhosereallazy1544
      @amichiganboiwhosereallazy1544 3 года назад +1

      Really?

    • @lostonso
      @lostonso 3 года назад +19

      @@amichiganboiwhosereallazy1544 yeah! “Genuine leather” doesnt just mean that the leather is real, it actually means its taken from the cheapest and most unwanted part of the hide. Its actually pretty genius that advertisers found a way to make something cheap sound like high quality

    • @bananaassasin7514
      @bananaassasin7514 2 года назад

      _r yeah the name sounds good but it's actually pretty low end

  • @komet_auf_crack
    @komet_auf_crack 9 месяцев назад +1

    there should be a compilation of dank pods screaming in pain and frustration 😂

  • @Riceforlife123
    @Riceforlife123 2 года назад +1

    "I don't want to pay those prices" *buys 1*

  • @itryen7632
    @itryen7632 3 года назад +277

    I fucking love these retro ringtones for some reason. They're simple, and make you feel like you're doing *REAL MEN'S BUSINESS*

    • @jellybIood
      @jellybIood 3 года назад +7

      Reminds me of early GTA games

    • @alphenhousplaysgames4565
      @alphenhousplaysgames4565 Год назад +7

      it also feels like if i don't pick it up something meaningfully bad may happen.

    • @itryen7632
      @itryen7632 Год назад +6

      @@alphenhousplaysgames4565 *ignores ringtone*
      *sirens start blaring a couple minutes later*

    • @artificialintelligence9378
      @artificialintelligence9378 Год назад +1

      ​@@itryen7632 With a mushroom cloud in the distance.

  • @GingerNingerGames
    @GingerNingerGames 3 года назад +49

    I work in a battery shop, I was watching this on lunch and when he's talking about the battery life on the first one my boss laughed as well, not even watching.

  • @bummer6
    @bummer6 Год назад +1

    4:00 - fun fact; both the fold-down microphone AND the antenna on that phone are 100% fake... They're just pieces of plastic with nothing in them. If you look at the cavity for the hinge when the flap is folded down, you can actually see the tiny little hole where the ACTUAL microphone is located.

  • @xadahgla
    @xadahgla 2 года назад +3

    4:17-ALL tech does that.

  • @kurokoro
    @kurokoro 3 года назад +165

    Yes kids this were the first "mobile"phones, a feature he didnt mention is you could microwave your food on the go with it and recreate a chernobyl nuclear meltdown if the battery exploded, also you can use it as a large hadron collider that could potentially cause a rift in time and space.

    • @anonym3017
      @anonym3017 Год назад

      These were the first handheld cellular mobile phones. There were also suitcase mobile phones and car boot mobile phones prior to that.
      And by prior I mean released in 1946. Weighing 80 pounds and a whopping 3 of the could be in the NY metro area at one time.

  • @fighter1375
    @fighter1375 3 года назад +25

    The first call on a mobile phone was an absolute Chad move 📞

  • @pauljensen5699
    @pauljensen5699 9 месяцев назад +1

    Centel was the telecom company for the Chicagoland area in mid 1980's to the early 1990's.
    My parents had cable TV through them.

  • @misterthegeoff9767
    @misterthegeoff9767 3 месяца назад

    My Dad still has his first ever phone in (sort of) working order. It was a motorola car phone made portable by putting the handset, base unit and an external battery into a big satchel with a shoulder strap. He kept it because every now and then he would need to plug it back in and find the phone number of a supplier he hadn't used in years. Even before the battery cooked itself it basically only functioned properly when plugged into a lighter socket but at the time it was a game changer because he could take customer orders while out doing deliveries instead of hoping there was space on his answering machine with it's 2 minute loop of 8 track tape for a capacity of 8 whole messages. 1980s technology was wild. Meanwhile my first phone was a 90s motorola with the fantastic feature that if you ran out of batteries you could take the battery out and put in 4 AAs and get like 30 seconds of talk time for a "Mum my phone's dying come pick me up from...[battery dead]"

  • @lombridious
    @lombridious 3 года назад +17

    4:45 AHHHHH THIS IS HOW THEY KEEP THE WEAKLINGS OF WALL STREET I MEAN YOU HAVE TO BE PHYSICALLY STRONG TO DO BUSINESS IN THE 80s.
    Man why are you so accurate.

  • @nicoh848
    @nicoh848 3 года назад +91

    I honestly loved joining the adventure of “is this new?!” and joining the rollercoaster. Please keep doing what you’re doing.

    • @swans184
      @swans184 3 года назад +1

      Yeah I love his enthusiasm!

  • @WilburJaywright
    @WilburJaywright Год назад

    “Aw, hit me right in the face!“ This reveals that you are all hands, and your fingertips are your face

  • @robonator2945
    @robonator2945 2 года назад

    the fact that he put the case on completely wrong, ignoring the literal antenna hole in it, is hilarious

  • @LunaS043
    @LunaS043 3 года назад +47

    It's pretty insane how fast tech has progressed in the last 20 years. From 2000 onward technology exploded in such a fast pace.

  • @ryder2156
    @ryder2156 3 года назад +38

    1983 to now isn’t even that long and look how our technology has progressed, from a literal brick to the phones we have today.

    • @martymoist
      @martymoist 3 года назад +7

      Right?!? My phone has a 144hz screen. Crazy seeing how it first started and how far we've gone.

    • @ryder2156
      @ryder2156 3 года назад +6

      @@martymoist and 30 minutes of battery life from 10 hours of charge. Now a days it’s the other way around.

    • @TheMultiGamerOfficial
      @TheMultiGamerOfficial 3 года назад +2

      1983 was nearly 40 years ago.

    • @ryder2156
      @ryder2156 3 года назад +3

      @@TheMultiGamerOfficial yea, not that long ago.

    • @kingbeaner1286
      @kingbeaner1286 3 года назад +2

      Imagine whats coming in the next 40 years

  • @amietinen
    @amietinen 2 года назад +1

    Had a MicroTAC as my first hand-me-down phone. Don't miss it.

  • @jaymcquillen
    @jaymcquillen 21 день назад

    Man, my dad had one of those Bell Mobility's in the mid-90's. Leather case and all. He had that and a pager at all times. Brings back memories.

  • @wingedfish1175
    @wingedfish1175 3 года назад +32

    "My backup phone is just the regular 12" another RUclipsr lost to the extravagant lifestyles

    • @ThinkAboutVic
      @ThinkAboutVic 3 года назад +2

      Well, he deserves it, and he usually doesn’t boast about it

    • @asahi7955
      @asahi7955 3 года назад

      I have a 12 as well and I don’t necessarily see how he or anyone else with a 12 would be bragging about it

    • @PotatoNamedCharlie
      @PotatoNamedCharlie 3 года назад

      @@asahi7955 shut up i have xs Max 😂😂

    • @Charlie-cg3cc
      @Charlie-cg3cc 3 года назад

      @@PotatoNamedCharlie are you bragging?

    • @PotatoNamedCharlie
      @PotatoNamedCharlie 3 года назад

      @@Charlie-cg3cc nah

  • @fortyinch
    @fortyinch 3 года назад +69

    It's funny how i remember my uncle having this. He was like a big shot. It was very rare for people to actually own these things in those times.

    • @38mb.
      @38mb. 2 года назад +6

      he was like a WHATTTTT

    • @CCG175
      @CCG175 2 года назад +4

      @@38mb. *big shot*

    • @andromedagalaxy990
      @andromedagalaxy990 2 года назад +4

      [[big shot]]

    • @onfoenemgrave
      @onfoenemgrave 2 года назад

      I shoot big shots all the time 💦🍆

    • @AlkaProto
      @AlkaProto 2 года назад +1

      @@andromedagalaxy990 THAT'S RIGHT!!!

  • @nickwallette6201
    @nickwallette6201 2 года назад

    When I was a kid, I had a friend whose dad was a gadget fiend. He had the Micro Tac back when it was _not at all_ common to see a cell phone. That friend and I were hours late home from school, having hopped off the bus early to spend some time at the home theater section of the electronics store (back when Dolby Pro Logic and LaserDisc players were a big deal.)
    His dad scooped us up at around 7pm and made me call my mom from his cell phone to let her know I was OK. I was like, "hey mom!" and she was all, "where are you calling me from?" and I was "from a cell phone!" and my friend's dad was all "hurry up! It costs like 50c a minute (or whatever)" haha... that was the coolest thing.

  • @AZREDFERN
    @AZREDFERN 2 года назад

    3:40 My father bought one of those used in the early 90's and used it until the network no longer supported it. I remember trying to take the battery off for no reason, and it was pretty much child proof. He also got a StarTac after that one, but the hinges kept breaking within the warranty period.

  • @PineThemApples
    @PineThemApples 3 года назад +32

    doesn't matter what im doing, if dankpods uploads, you betcha im dropping everything to go watch that video asap

  • @PedroNogueiranunes
    @PedroNogueiranunes 3 года назад +121

    You and ozzymanreviews should make a Collab. Would be the funniest thing ever

  • @ProtonFilms_Mark
    @ProtonFilms_Mark 2 года назад

    My Nostalgia Nokia is the 6230. Later traded it in for a 6230i. This is 2003-2005, I loved the fact that it was square when all the other phones had to have had a funky shape.

  • @stephenheath8465
    @stephenheath8465 Год назад +1

    The Star Tac are still Classics to this day,might be the first Cell Phone that can fit inside your pants pockets