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1970s Innovation we FORGOT Existed

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  • Опубликовано: 14 авг 2024
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    the days of yesteryear more often!
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    recollection road, rhetty for history, you might be old if you remember these, you might be old, life in america, recollection road 1970s, recollection road 1980s, recollection road 1990s, recollection road 1960s, recollection road movies and tv, recollection road videos, rhetty for history 70s, rhetty for history 80s, rhetty for history 90s, rhetty for history 60s, nostalgia

Комментарии • 34

  • @gjace26
    @gjace26 8 месяцев назад +3

    1970s innovations. Proceeds to talk about portable tv's from 80s and 90s . Good job

  • @obrysii
    @obrysii 8 месяцев назад +4

    I always wanted the Game Gear TV cartridge. I thought it was the coolest idea.

  • @davidfarnes4615
    @davidfarnes4615 7 месяцев назад +3

    I had a Casio TV-770, with a 2" color screen, still have it sitting on a shelf as a curiosity. Worked very well, used 4x AA batteries; took it with me on vacations, came in handy during power cuts too.

  • @michaelcoffey7362
    @michaelcoffey7362 8 месяцев назад +2

    Cool 😀

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 8 месяцев назад +6

    Most portable TVS only required two strong men and a boy to carry them. 😮

  • @chrisk7626
    @chrisk7626 7 месяцев назад +3

    Those Watchmen TVs were very expensive. When I was in high school they wanted to confiscate my friends. It led all the way to the police showing up. He said I may be wrong for having in school but this thing is way too expensive I'm not giving it to you that's stealing. Very persuasive kid. He kept his watch man🎉🎉. He was my hero he proved that just cuz you can make a rule in school doesn't mean it doesn't break a law. These know-it-all teachers and staff didn't know what to do with themselves. As he proclaimed if you take that for me I'm going to file charges🎉🎉🎉

  • @drbluzer
    @drbluzer 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have seen the evolution of TV's since the use of the CRT (cathode ray tube) to the present day flat screen TV's .
    The early TV's had manual control knobs for vertical hold , horizontal hold , etc. . The early TV's also used tubes
    as transistors did not become cheaper to manufacture until the 1970's . Tube type TV's took around a minute to
    warm up and display the TV program . In the 1980's tubes started to become obsolete in TV"s and the "instant on"
    transistorized TV was born . PLL''s (phase locked loops) eliminated all of the manual adjustment controls and TV's
    became more streamlined . Then came digital tuners along with flat screen TV's and the CRT (cathode ray tube)
    became obsolete and disappeared .

  • @tookeydookey
    @tookeydookey 7 месяцев назад +1

    Huh, Vwestlife looked at a Sony Watchman from 1994 and now this video on vintage portable TVs! Awesome!😉👌

  • @rachelcody3355
    @rachelcody3355 8 месяцев назад +2

    Had a small, portable black and white TV about the size of a shoe box, ran on DC/AC power from Sony. My family took it with us camping. It was great for a rainy day and not miss a show as this was before we had a VCR. I remember watching the Dukes of Hazzard on it in a tent, during a camping trip with my brother, sister and our parents. It was pretty neat for what it was.
    Today, kids just stream it on the phone anywhere. I guess the kids today really would not understand not having access to the internet and shows 24/7, anywhere you went. TV shows were more anticipated back then. If you missed your show, you had to hope to catch it on a rerun if at all. As I recall, we didn't have TV on all the time. We only watched it as a family to watch a certain show or special. I do recall my dad watching news everynight, we would watch a kid's show and then it was time to get ready for bed.
    Had to have been early 80's when mom bought me and my sister a small black and white TV to share in our room. My older brother got a new turntable and radio system. She must have gotten them as a set as the tv and radio were white. My sister and I actually wanted my brother's radio/turntable over the TV. We were out growing kids shows and onto to the latest music.
    I will always remember watching TV while camping on that little black and white TV. I don't recall what happened to the TV. I think it eventually broke or was sold in a garage sale. Can't recall. Long gone now. But what fun memories.

  • @Shawn666Hellion
    @Shawn666Hellion 7 месяцев назад +2

    I had a casio color tv that had TFT active matrix screen,the picture was fantastic

  • @lorensims4846
    @lorensims4846 8 месяцев назад +4

    I was impressed when that first Sony Watchman portable TV came out, but we didn't get our first portable TV until the mid-nineties with a JVC 3.5" color LCD pocket TV. We probably actually used it about half a dozen times before the analog-to-digital transition rendered it useless. I still have it, I'm just not sure what I can do with it.

  • @paul.theeightiesluvr.1945
    @paul.theeightiesluvr.1945 8 месяцев назад +3

    I hadr two of these things and they were both Casios I love them they were so cool looking I remember how much giddiness I felt while I was putting the little double aa batteries in them and pulling up the antenna and watching color TV and oh my God it was actually a pretty good little TV set both versions of them from what I remembe.r My Grandma had all kinds of gadgets growing up so I got to see many of these things before most kids🎉❤ thanks for posting these awesome items..memory manner they Rock and so do you❤🎉

  • @oldtimer2192
    @oldtimer2192 8 месяцев назад +1

    I appear to be of a similar age as you sir and I also remember many of these devices.
    Fast forward a few decades later and the next couple of generations take the R and D behind these, “at the time awesome gadgets” absolutely for granted with such modern marvels as the Smartphone and tablet, and, as with many very young people these days have full access to a tablet or smartphone when they are not even two years old so their helicopter parents can keep them occupied and so therefore the adults can check their antisocial media feeds to get their fix!
    It has turned into a bit of a Dopamine roller coaster ride for way too many!
    Social media is, in many cases, actually the complete opposite of social!
    😔😔
    Brilliant video and great presentation.
    👍👍

  • @rEdf196
    @rEdf196 7 месяцев назад +2

    I remember, in the mid to late 1980's seeing these new state of the art LED/LCD based pocket TV sets at Radio Shack. But like Disco-Vision, the CED and the Beta VCR, Nobody gave a hoot.

    • @HelloKittyFanMan
      @HelloKittyFanMan 7 месяцев назад

      They never had this kind of LED technology back then.

  • @luisreyes1963
    @luisreyes1963 7 месяцев назад

    My cousin had one of those tiny TVs, but it was in B&W.
    Nowadays, you can watch streaming video on devices like PCs, smartphones & tablets. 👀

  • @bdh70
    @bdh70 7 месяцев назад +1

    Funny how nearly all of these 1970s marvels were made in the mid to late eighties.

  • @afriend9428
    @afriend9428 7 месяцев назад +2

    *the tv watch I saw this in a James Bond film!* 💡

  • @95blahblahhaha
    @95blahblahhaha 7 месяцев назад +3

    This video was good but there were a million other titles that would've made more sense and I still would've watched

  • @drbluzer
    @drbluzer 7 месяцев назад +1

    The majority of these I never did see as I was in the Navy and stationed overseas in Spain .

  • @davinp
    @davinp 8 месяцев назад +2

    Sony is a Japanese company which is why they have good build quality same as the Japanese automakers

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 8 месяцев назад +2

    For high definition video we put the tv set upon a dictionary! 😅

  • @drbluzer
    @drbluzer 7 месяцев назад +1

    INNOVATIONS FROM THE 1970'S :
    @00;25 : SONY WATCHMAN FD210
    @02:25 : SEIKO TV WATCH DXA002
    @04:10 : SINCLAIR POCKET TV FTV1
    @05:42 : EPSON ET10
    @07:38 : REALISTIC POCKET VISION 3
    @09:35 : CASIO TV 600
    @11:35 : CASIO SY 21 BLCD

  • @XMguy
    @XMguy 8 месяцев назад +2

    There is more misinformation in here than I’ve ever heard. Wow. Albeit. I did have the Radio Shack version of the Casio 600.

    • @scotttaylor1051
      @scotttaylor1051 8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed, it was painful to hear "LCD" and "CRT" tossed around like synonyms in this video. For the record, the Sinclair FTV1 was a CRT, not LCD, and the reverse is true of the Realistic model. This sounds like it was written by some really ignorant AI, just stringing words together to sound superficially coherent but rarely straying near the facts.

  • @kevanhubbard9673
    @kevanhubbard9673 7 месяцев назад

    A watch ⌚ you can watch!

  • @vanhetgoor
    @vanhetgoor 7 месяцев назад +1

    Once I had the Realistic LCD TV, it is gone now, don't know what happened to it. I used it only a few times, batteries in the TV and more batteries in the detachable back light. It costed a small fortune to operate and the reception was not that great. It was not that useful, it was more a gimmick, as a child I thought that it would be wonderful to be able to watch television everywhere, well it isn't! Watching TV is boring, TV is is painkiller for the mind, an addiction, stupid amusement, an instrument to control and dis-inform the people.

  • @krieck6801
    @krieck6801 8 месяцев назад

    The ET10 was not a projection TV.

  • @HelloKittyFanMan
    @HelloKittyFanMan 7 месяцев назад

    Oops, there's no such thing as a "BLCD display."

  • @jamesbohms4163
    @jamesbohms4163 8 месяцев назад +1

    babble babble babble

  • @e28forever30
    @e28forever30 7 месяцев назад

    Nick Shabazz is it you?

  • @davinp
    @davinp 8 месяцев назад

    Hey say tablet, not iPad.

  • @huckleberryfinnish271
    @huckleberryfinnish271 7 месяцев назад

    Abandon that thumbnail, please.

  • @richardmccready4182
    @richardmccready4182 8 месяцев назад +2

    Broken fucking record everything went from analogue to digital. Of course it did.