To be honest, I'm quite envious of you to be able to live through these changes and experience them, because for me; I can't wait to see what more the future has to offer.
So true, born in 1953 i remember rotary dial phones, rabbit ears on the tv to get all four stations. Today on my I Mac pc, i was looking for a good deal on an I phone... Oh my, a drone just flew by!!! ; )...
My mom’s boss had a car phone in 1979 or ‘80. It literally looked like a house telephone sitting on the floor console. His sons were about my age and they insisted on getting their dad to drive around town and show it to me; I was amazed. Their favorite “trick” was to call a crosstown friend from in front of the friend’s house and say “Hey, can we come over?” When the friend said “Yes”, one of the brothers would jump out of the car and ring the doorbell while the other kid was still on the phone. “HOW did you get here so fast!?!?!”
@@mikeonfreeserve2926 Yes. Oddly the car was black and shot flames out the back. Had no idea what that was about. Seeing this post triggered a memory of seeing perhaps the earliest digital p8rn in ‘80-‘81 at their house. And when I say digital, I mean digital! There was a program and it put a seemingly random series of characters on that green screen, but if you backed up far enough, say to Cleveland, you could see the pattern actually took the shape of a nude woman! Some geek must have spent weeks putting that together.
@@Pelgram Haha! Or maybe a Flash costume. The phone in the car was a straight up big-ass house phone, with the coiled wire between the handset and phone body. I can’t specifically remember if it had a rotary dial…most likely was an early push-button type. Definitely wild stuff. Later on in the 80’s my mom was in pharmaceutical sales so she had a ‘bag phone’ to have in the car. You had to carry a dang satchel to lug the phone around.
just search they are available in all colors www.ebay.nl/itm/New-Native-Union-POP-PHONE-Vintage-Retro-Handset-for-iPhone-Android/302338442695?hash=item4664c685c7:m:mJgS5db1CWWL-ZAIma6Pv9Q:rk:1:pf:0
I remember when mobiles first came out and most people wondered why anyone thought they were so important they needed to carry one How times have changed
Mobile phones were associated with the wealthy, and one day we saw a woman in her 20's on the bus (this is in western Canada) talking on a mobile, and we thought she was being so pretentious and absurd, because if you could afford a mobile you could easily afford your own car and not take a bus. The buses were only used by poor people and students.
What do you mean we bring our phone? I for instance only have portable RUclips player with me all the time. Indeed it has telephony app integrated, but it's useless add-on.
I always enjoyed Tomorrow's World with Michael Rodd. He has a great presenting style which I always enjoyed and looked forward to as a child many years ago. He's one of those ageless people who make me wish we could rewind the clock. Thank you Michael.
Now Sir, you are grossly exaggerating and living in some deluded Neverland. It will never happen or be a reality, at least not in our lifetime. Should you wish to listen to some nice music, Sir you may always turn the dial on your wireless for some smashing music, Sir. As for me I do not envisage your science fiction being reality anytime soon, only as some fantastic dream concocted by your childlike imagination. You may as well state that we could fly to the moon in a rocket. No, Sir these are fanciful things for young children to imagine and not for adults to delve into such fantasies.👴
I did this as an experiment in 1978 using DTMF tones for dialling, a Beltek transceiver for mobile and Pye Westminster W30U at home end. Even built a pulse to DTMF interface so could use a standard pulse dial telephone. On hook/off hook from mobile sent subaudio tone (71.9hz) to base station and returned dial tone. Ringing tone from landline sent a different subaudio tone to mobile which was detected and triggered a ringing generator to ring a standard telephone. Was on UHF and not legal but was revolutionary at time.
Home Office: "Those wavelengths will never be made available". Vodafone; "We will give you £5 billion for them" Home Office; "Oh ok then, they're yours"
As mentioned in the video back then there wasn't a reserved band for mobile phones back then. You could interfere with a broadcast of emergency services.
Mobile phones back then didn't use the cellular radio techniques that made modern mobile phones possible. I'm more familiar with mobile history here in the US where one of the ways the reduced airtime was to charge an absolute fortune for it and even then you might find a pay phone prior to finding an available mobile phone channel. Prior to cellular a mobile phone base station had a range of about 25 miles and in some cities could only serve two calls at a time through two channels. Cellular could handle hundreds of calls per base station, and served cells in three directions. In the early days each cell could 40-some channels, later 56 per phone company, but each base station served three cells. Cellular is a short range technology and it was possible to use the same channel 50 miles away where the old system required a 150 mile or more distance prior to re-using the same channel. This increased capacity meant that such limits weren't necessary. I haven't even touched on the digital technologies such as GSM which vastly increased capacity even further.
When they first came out you get your chat time down. I once ended up on the phone for an hour whilst in France in 1995. That one call cost over a hundred quid and I had to bill the customer for it.
This prototype was UK made though, thus TW was technically accurate in their framing. It would be another decade before the first Cellular Network was set up in the UK.
@@Mxyzptlksac 🤣🤣 no! My partner shouts, for some reason he gets louder than he usually is...and has the bloody thing on speaker, so everyone hears everything. Totally oblivious to anyone else’s needs. 🤦♀️
Someone calling themselves "David Parker" (with the strongest Indian accent you have ever heard) calls him from British Leyland Automotive Dealings and tells him that he has overpaid on his 1977 Austin Maxi. But the refund cheque they posted him has too much money on it so he has to repay them with Grace Brothers gift cards.
Social media is such an evil thing that recommends stuff that don't open your mind. Group-x will get more group-x media that is hate for group-y, just because hate sells more.
@@carolynellis387 ah jeez lads stop being so melodramatic. The pub, yea where people used to sit sometimes all day.. the good old days :) I still have great conversations with friends, in fact I can contact friend I live nowhere near now. Also family abroad. Can do my online banking, shop, even watch RUclips videos and am subscribed to many educational channels. Have learned how to do minor plumbing, electrical work, some wood work in the new house we bought. Can research things, translate things. Snap picture memories. Not all is bad, relax! Your parents thought the music you listened to as a child was the end of the world. Past generations always think the future is strange/bad 🙄 nothing in this world is simply black and white. Sure social media(FB, Twitter and the likes due to unregulated forums can be a cesspit) hence why I choose not to use them. you too have a choice not to 👍🏽
In 1988 I was hitch hiking back from Glastonbury Festival. A chap in a posh Aston Martin convertible stopped and gave me a lift. It was a hot day so he had the roof down. Along the journey he asked if I knew anyone who I could get some weed from, which I did. The novelty was he had a telephone in his car he allowed me to use to call my mate. It was quite a thing to use a phone in the car and when I spoke to my mate, he didn't believe me. Needless to say I got lift all the way home and a nice little present for myself for helping.
ok but almost 40 years later and half the planet thinks its a flat planet, jokes are outlawed, fat is beautiful, ill settle for the old ways to your hotspot any day lol ;-)
@@MacStoker People think the world is flat again, People are arrested for telling a joke, life expectancy is less than it was 10 years ago, fats back. we are going backwards, the old days wont be long.
Then Apple wrapped it in tin foil and started charging $9999999.99 for theirs. Except you couldn't dial out. And you could only use it facing north. And you could only use it if you had a subscription to Beezer comic.
I absolutely adore how it's just. a phone. a regular phone receiver with a cord and everything. I feel like I'm looking at the first frog to evolve like yes buddy! You can do it!!!!
Wow I wish today's shows were as focused and informative as this! Everything today is over simplified and with flashy graphics and music detracting from the content. Eh, I must be getting old.
Click, on BBC is much in this spirit. Besides that; I'm rather sure, that a lot of viewers, back in 1979, where not all that convinced about the viability of a wearable telephone. -But it certainly was viable :3
That's because there were no "shows" back then. Instead, there was a range of "programmes". That might seem like a trivial difference in linguistics, but it's really much more than that. I blame the USA for popularising brainless "shows".
When I was a young office guy in London back in the seventies I would go out with my colleagues for our one hour lunch break each day to the local pub (I worked near Wardour Street, great times). Generally 2 pints, sometimes 3 and on the odd Friday 4 when we could sneak in an extra 15 minutes or so (yes we would have all been sacked in today's politically correct and overly safety obsessive world). Once out of the office we were not contactable and for that 1 hour we were able to totally relax. I then remember the company bringing pagers in. I was quite amazed standing in the pub when one of my senior colleagues pager started to beep. Well that was the beginning of the end really; soon after came the mobile phones (those old bricks haha), computers and all the rest of the technology. The world today is all go go go but I was lucky enough to have sampled the old world, slow slow slow; I know which world I preferred!
The new world, as you call it, and its technology, is responsible for countless new job opportunities, though. Even though you are right to say we now live in a much faster world, I don't really mind it that much. It still allows for a lot of free time and a decent living.
41 years on, I’m watching this video on a pocket-size iPhone while sending this comment round the world. As with old-fashioned phone calls, I could have spent my time more productively.
Absolutely love this. It's crazy watching this and seeing how far technology has come. Now if only we could get a rotary dial app for your smartphones!
It’ll never take off. who would want to talk to someone while driving or out in public where others can hear them. i’ll take my phone calls in the privacy of my own kitchen
Everything was great before Thatcher wasn't it? Unions had the country by the bollocks, winter of discontent. Yeah life was great under labour wasn't it?
+Andy M Cycling in the remote countryside isn't really the adventure it was. We still get punctures and stuff and rained on, no smartphone can prevent all that, but the sense of being "cut off" from family and civilisation has gone.
+Andy M Agreed. I'm only 28, I work in IT, and even I think we're just too closely connected. People get upset or start looking for you if you don't respond to them within seconds and that's really sad as well as irritating. Even in the 90s as a kid, people could go hours doing their own thing completely cut off from the world - and it was bliss.
+Clarissa McPigeon Same. We depend too fast on the technology and it's not without its faults. We get impatient. I used to not bother with a mobile in 2003 cos i was old school. Never had one permanent till 2004.
You know what i hate about these friggin "smartphones"? You have to be a smart ARSE to navigate them and also to put up with texting naturally, Sick of fixing spelling errors. And the advertising. And. And etc
We should never have come down from the trees, let alone wrote letters and cut the trees down to make paper - then have to recycle the paper to make more paper so that we can plant more trees. Next week there was a typewriter attached to the handset to allow mobile telemessages to be sent.
I concur with your thoughts, Sir. It will never happen or be a reality, at least not in our lifetime. Should you wish to listen to some nice music, Sir you may always turn the dial on your wireless for some smashing music. As for me I do not envisage your science fiction being reality anytime soon, only as some fantastic dream concocted by your childlike imagination. You may as well state that we could fly to the moon in a rocket and talk to people on Earth. No, Sir these are fanciful things for young children to imagine and not for adults to delve into such fantasies.👴
My friends opened the first mobile phone shop in Ipswich. On their opening day, I told one of them that I thought it was unlikely to be a success because there'd be no demand for them. "There's a phone box on every corner if you need to contact someone," I said. I've never been more wrong.
Haki Kaki That’s true and the reason is because you don’t make calls anymore with a phone. My first cellphone, a Motorola flip-phone lasted for days and the batteries I carried with me actually were spares.
As someone with local knowledge i should confirm that Danbury is the tallest hill in the area and on a clear day can be seen from Chelmsford. They thought this shoot through quite well! The logo on the side of the van at the start indicates it's an Essex County Council vehicle (not the one that 'Bad News Tour' used...) Chelmsford also boasts a 300ft Chain Home Radar tower that was re-located there from the coast in the 'fifties, for experimental purposes. I have a sneaking suspicion the test transmission used this to good advantage too..
The Chelmer Institute is sadly now gone but I believe was assimilated into what is now ARU's Chelmsford base. I could be wrong though. Wonder what became of Liz Charnock?
Absolutely amazing! How do you think they would have reacted in 1979 if they knew I was one day watching this video on a smartphone using mobile data in the middle of countryside! Incredible!
Yes I was about to say the obvious why cos he didn't abuse any kids.. But it was obviously inferred in the comment and thus didn't need pointing out even tho I did. Haha
That some top notch modern tech right there, I'm gonna head straight down to woolworths in my Austin p6 whilst listening to my favourite cassette tape to purchase this wonderful device.
You've hit the anilin the head for the cherry picking nonsense that is the theory of evolution, massive leaps and bounds have taken place in technology but where is the evolution of our society or country, its been dumbed down and repressed.
Very interesting to see what came before the famous brick phone in 1983, am surprised they still used an old fashion rotary dialer instead of push button dialer which was already available in the 70s
@@sailenkatel3436 I really wonder about all the change witnessed by people in earlier decades. My great great grandmother was born about 1860 when the US Civil War was happening, and she died about 1960 when Elvis Presley and television existed. From horses to automobiles, and candles to electricity, telephones, movies, television. And the changes in politics and society back then.... Wow. As for my own life, I am surprised how fashion and music seem to have changed very little in the past 25 years, compared to the huge changes between 1950 and 1975. Seems bizarre how little these things have changed. But the changes brought by computers, internet, mobile phones are massive. We knew computers would have a huge effect on the future, but we really didnt know in what ways. We had seen that electricity had a huge effect on society from the 1800s to 1970, so we knew computers would have a huge effect in the future. Thankfully sentient computers have not taken control of society (at least not yet) like in some dystopian movies like The Matrix and Terminator. It is harder to learn new things as you get older, but slowly I have picked up the technology that matters in my life (I use an iPhone extensively with my job) but other aspects of technology I dont need to bother with (video gaming, facebook). Time does seem to pass faster when you are older. The last 10 years really seem to have flown by. You kind of get used to people much younger than you knowing more about technology than you do. Its just the way things are. When you are young you have spare time to learn all the newest tech, and when you are older you are too busy with work and other things in life to learn all the constantly changing tech. Some of it changes so fast its not worth learning about (like that stupid original version of Windows 8, - what a waste of time that was). Thanks to science fiction we have a rough idea of what might be coming (1960s Star Trek with its Communicators (mobile phones) and then 1990s Star Trek with its touch screen computers and interactive talking computers ). In the next several decades I imagine more use of self-driving cars, holograms, greater use of DNA technology, genetic engineering of individuals etc. Star Trek's replicators might happen to a small degree (3D printers) but probably will not be able to replicate food or living creatures. So anyways if we start to see these things in the future I wont be 100% shocked. Even in the 1960s I read some futurists were predicting that waves of migration into Europe and the West would become a very big issue, whereas in the 1960s that issue was less significant.
In another 50 years, you dont need to watch anything, it will be directly transponded into your brain and it will gives you the experience and knowlege
People actually not only imagined but also counted on the future inventions step by step that would gradually lead to gadgets such as modern smart phones
I used to love Tomorrow's World. I remember as a kid in the 70s my brother explaining to me about the invention of videos in the future. It seemed too good to be true that one day you would be able to watch any film you wanted instead of waiting to see it at the cinema (or listening to it on a record and reading the book). And now you have to explain to children what a video recorder and record is! (And a book if we're not careful).
Arthur C Clarke wrote about cell phones in the 60s . Nikola Tesla predicted the mobile phone in 1901 and predicted the smart phone in 1926 , you say you predicted the cell phone in 1975 makes me wonder if you had read and watched 2001: a space odyssey, both written book and film came out in 1968
It goes to show that teachers don't know everything! When I was in primary school in 1992 I had to write about what I did on the weekend; our city had just got Toys R Us, newly opened, and I talked about going in there. My teacher marked me down for writing the 'R' backwards. They know jack shit.
The Home Office did make the bandwidth available eventually, with the first official UK mobile phone call made from St Katherine Docks to Newbury, 1st January 1985. The mobile network was Vodaphone, with British Telecom (the former General Post Office) being really slow to take up the challenge of creating the UK's first Mobile phone network.
They're still dragging their feet! The UK is far behind most other in-country 4G networks. If we could get our infrastructure back on track perhaps we could push overlaying technologies with more confidence and maybe, just maybe, lead the way with future innovations.
Matty112uk ... Vodafone haven't learnt much in 30 years, I have to lean against the patio doors to get just one bar on my smartphone, if it wasn't for the tree line I would be able to see the nearest cell tower it's about 600 yds away, other phone sims Vectone, EE and 02 all show 3 bars or better !
I agree, not been on Vodafone for years myself either. They were still much faster at getting a mobile network up and running than BT were. Of course, having a network is one thing, making it a good one is something else! :)
There was a really great time when we had cellular phones that used analog signals mostly back in the 1980's and 1990's. Those were great fun times for people who had radio scanners that could be easily modified to pick up those frequencies. There was no encryption for cell phones at the time and people that used cellular phones were being listened to by a lot of other people so they didn't have a private conversation. Often times hilarious pranks were pulled on the owners.
Yes, I had one of those scanners back around the mid 80's. I recall the majority of the conversations in the evenings were business men on their way home from work either arranging dates with their mistresses or thanking them for a great night previously, whilst driving home to wifey and a cooked meal on the table.
@@tonysmith1682 Back in those days it was only really yuppie wideboys and fat cats who were into mobile phones in a big way. They are exactly the sort of person to engage in that sort of behaviour.
This is the very same Michael Rodd with his legendary tape-driven satnav from eight years earlier. Looks a lot older in this clip. And also this wasn't a "mobile phone" in the modern sense. This was basically just a tricked-out walkie talkie that could connect by radio into the conventional PSTN. But it was a very good start and laid the groundwork for what we take for granted today.
"It does not utilise any technologies from the phone in the video" Largely because some of the key technologies underlying traditional voice telephony have changed since then (e.g. how numbers are transmitted through the system). However, the basic flowchart is similar - information is converted to radio waves, transmitted to a receiver, which converts it back to an electrical signal, which after passing through more equipment, interfaces with the traditional telephone network (and vice versa). Plus, some of the technological limitations of that prototype were baked in due to a combination of the frequency it was using (probably shared with numerous other applications) and lack of encryption - the idea being to minimise the amount of radio bandwidth used.
I think it's the earnestness of the man, strolling out into the wilds of Essex to make a pioneering phone call on a 'Bakelite' mobile phone, that cracks me up.
A remarkable little film, right at the birth of digital communications and the web, how far we've come 45 years, i feel privileged to have lived long enough to see electronics progress from cumbersome valve based stuff to devices that contain multi billion semiconductor equivalents of them that can do almost anything, and yet still fit in a shirt pocket, a pity such technology has also brought immense social change and not always for the better, perhaps we as the end users now need to undergo the same evolution to make ourselves as good as our technology.
Despite him heavily stressing the 'digital information' aspect, it was based on analogue transmission. Connecting a mobile device to a PTSN (phone network) was mainly an issue of regulation and processing power.
He's now 78 years old, presumably retired although he still seems to do the odd public appearance here and there. As recently as 2015 he was still running his own live events, video and production company.
before the days of Time division digital multiplex . there wasn't the free channels to support lots of calls ;) now they can have multiple conversations per channel.
I was married five days before this was broadcast in 1979, I’m still married, but bloody hell how the world has changed in forty years.
To be honest, I'm quite envious of you to be able to live through these changes and experience them, because for me; I can't wait to see what more the future has to offer.
I wasn't alive.
Like how if you live in London,you can go outside your house and immediately be transported to Lahore.
So true, born in 1953 i remember rotary dial phones, rabbit ears on the tv to get all four stations. Today on my I Mac pc, i was looking for a good deal on an I phone... Oh my, a drone just flew by!!! ; )...
I was -7 years old when this came out.
Watching this in a smartphone is quite a metacommentary itself.
Victor Manteca YOU’RE IN A SMARTPHONE?!?
On*****
crazybird We all are! Part of a Sims game “God” is playing didn’t u know? 😂
Amazing
@@kilIstation He is neither in or on a smartphone. The content is in the smartphone. So stop being judgemental all the time
They cut out the parts where he kept receiving PPI Claim calls and calls about the car accident he never had.
😂😂😂
That really did make me laugh out loud.
And the Indian scammers telling you that your computer is under possible hacking....
(strong Indian voice) hello my name is David, am I speaking to Mr perryman?
@@saltysponge9965 Yes, can I ask what you are calling about?....
My mom’s boss had a car phone in 1979 or ‘80. It literally looked like a house telephone sitting on the floor console. His sons were about my age and they insisted on getting their dad to drive around town and show it to me; I was amazed. Their favorite “trick” was to call a crosstown friend from in front of the friend’s house and say “Hey, can we come over?” When the friend said “Yes”, one of the brothers would jump out of the car and ring the doorbell while the other kid was still on the phone. “HOW did you get here so fast!?!?!”
Did he park his car in a cave and only bring it out when he saw a big searchlight in the sky?
@@mikeonfreeserve2926 Yes. Oddly the car was black and shot flames out the back. Had no idea what that was about. Seeing this post triggered a memory of seeing perhaps the earliest digital p8rn in ‘80-‘81 at their house. And when I say digital, I mean digital! There was a program and it put a seemingly random series of characters on that green screen, but if you backed up far enough, say to Cleveland, you could see the pattern actually took the shape of a nude woman! Some geek must have spent weeks putting that together.
Omg...
Was the kid wearing a superman costume when he rang the doorbell?
@@Pelgram Haha! Or maybe a Flash costume. The phone in the car was a straight up big-ass house phone, with the coiled wire between the handset and phone body. I can’t specifically remember if it had a rotary dial…most likely was an early push-button type. Definitely wild stuff. Later on in the 80’s my mom was in pharmaceutical sales so she had a ‘bag phone’ to have in the car. You had to carry a dang satchel to lug the phone around.
I'll bet when he made this little film he couldn't imagine that one day people would be watching it on their phones...
pycroft
They will what??
Don’t be daft. It’ll never work. Who’d want a thing like that?
On the shitter of all places.
I’ll bet when he put that jacket on, he couldn’t imagine that one day people would be totally gobsmacked at the size of the lapels...
I'm watching this on my tablet
@@mikejenkins4924 lol
Now I can talk to myself in public and people think I'm on Bluetooth.
It's a real shame the mobile phone never caught on.
Luke Wilcox instead*
I still don't have one. I still have a proper curly wire phone :)
just search they are available in all colors www.ebay.nl/itm/New-Native-Union-POP-PHONE-Vintage-Retro-Handset-for-iPhone-Android/302338442695?hash=item4664c685c7:m:mJgS5db1CWWL-ZAIma6Pv9Q:rk:1:pf:0
Ulster Groundhopper 😂😂😂
Yea thay seemed cool!
And now we need a reaction video of Michael Rodd (the presenter, he's alive and well) watching this on his iphone...
Anybody knows his number so could send him this please ?
interesting
No he's dead
It will result in physical body chips, under the skin....and then dear friends, that is where anonymity and privacy Die
He is very much alive and well in North Shields 76 years young
I remember when mobiles first came out and most people wondered why anyone thought they were so important they needed to carry one
How times have changed
Mobile phones were associated with the wealthy, and one day we saw a woman in her 20's on the bus (this is in western Canada) talking on a mobile, and we thought she was being so pretentious and absurd, because if you could afford a mobile you could easily afford your own car and not take a bus. The buses were only used by poor people and students.
What do you mean we bring our phone? I for instance only have portable RUclips player with me all the time. Indeed it has telephony app integrated, but it's useless add-on.
I still feel that way
@@dariusanderton3760 i know mobiles have always been expensive but i dont think they were ever the same price as a car
I remember when I tried to live without a bank account. Impossible.
I remember seeing this on telly, Tomorrow's world was a must watch back then!
Same here, I remember it too.
Me too!
Me too remember the cd disc
watchin it for the 1st time on my samsung galaxy.
@@davidthompson6834 the compact disc disc?
oh, the good ol days..
back when i wasn't born yet
I remember this because i was still in my dads ballsack
We all feel the same way.
@@IAm-zo1bo My dad wasn't even born, lol
@@hendriyanar1465 hi child
Yeah, I often heard them say that when I was young.
I always enjoyed Tomorrow's World with Michael Rodd. He has a great presenting style which I always enjoyed and looked forward to as a child many years ago. He's one of those ageless people who make me wish we could rewind the clock. Thank you Michael.
They totally missed the point of mobile phones: ads and selfies.
😃👍
You forgot games
And porn
Для приложения в play market "Yo!"
Spying and ideology propaganda
Call me a crazy dreamer, but imagine how powerful it would be with a cine camera and a record player attached...
Now Sir, you are grossly exaggerating and living in some deluded Neverland. It will never happen or be a reality, at least not in our lifetime. Should you wish to listen to some nice music, Sir you may always turn the dial on your wireless for some smashing music, Sir. As for me I do not envisage your science fiction being reality anytime soon, only as some fantastic dream concocted by your childlike imagination. You may as well state that we could fly to the moon in a rocket. No, Sir these are fanciful things for young children to imagine and not for adults to delve into such fantasies.👴
Oh man. That would be out if this world. Imagine watching BBC or movies on the palm of your hand!
What about a calculator or a clock or a diary, now that would be amazing
Ridiculous idea.
I'm still waiting for my silver jump suit with triangular chest panel and pointed calf length boots to become fashionable like they promised.
I laughed when he walked out of the room with the phone still attached. Looked like a Monty Python skit.
It's also so weird these days to see an office desk without some kind of computer on it.
The entire 70’s were a Monty Python skit.
Even in that time would look ridiculous. You have no way to get rid of the phone part, that you need to hold in the hand forever.
The entrance looked like the one when Cleese's reporter character was carried out with the desk. Could be the same, actually. Too lazy to check.
Albert Batfinder
Back in the 1970s, I didn’t have a silly walk like I do now. Well, that’s me ol’ joints to blame for that.
I did this as an experiment in 1978 using DTMF tones for dialling, a Beltek transceiver for mobile and Pye Westminster W30U at home end. Even built a pulse to DTMF interface so could use a standard pulse dial telephone. On hook/off hook from mobile sent subaudio tone (71.9hz) to base station and returned dial tone. Ringing tone from landline sent a different subaudio tone to mobile which was detected and triggered a ringing generator to ring a standard telephone. Was on UHF and not legal but was revolutionary at time.
Wish there were still programmes like this on tv
Are people still watching TV nowadays?
You can watch Click also on BBC
@@Kdc861 Yes.
Same, I loved tomorrow's world as a child, couldn't wait for it to be aired every Thursday, think it was on then lol
The gadget show was simular
Intelligent TV before this X-Factor, Love Island and Strictly bollocks came along.
Well said!
Junk food and junk tv. Making people stupid, deliberately!
shut up, oldhead
TW was bollocks too
Ha ha ha ha “Strictly bollocks”. I call it “Strictly Dumb Prancing”.
But the question still remains, where are those papers??
mattfox14 Some say he's still searching to this day.
TheJanDahl could well be in his download folder on his mobile.
Those papers he wanted were his king size Rizla.
Lost to the BBC archives probably XD
They'll be in the last place he looks.
Blimey the battery lasted a whole six minutes. Battery life my iPhone can only dream of.
Maybe its time to trade up from your IPhone five?
One bit of battery and the new ones fall apart.
1979: People might even watch 2020 BBC on it!
2020: *watches 1979 BBC on it*
No more serious work mate ..70s 80s never come back ..💚💚💚 bbc is shit 2020
Well played 👏👏
@RACHEL LAWRENCE BrexSHIT
Nah....nobody said that
Justyou
The sound quality is pretty amazing for a 16mm production from 1979. I wish current TV docs were this well-done.
They had great sound engineers!
Home Office: "Those wavelengths will never be made available".
Vodafone; "We will give you £5 billion for them"
Home Office; "Oh ok then, they're yours"
Les James lol
I worked at Vodafone during the bidding process, it was fascinating how it worked.
The bids were sent in by ...
FAX.
🤣
@Armando Silvier That's what Thatcher said 🤔
@Armando Silvier Someone has to regulate the bandwidth and spectrum or it would be utter chaos.
@Armando Silvier You would end up with it being like British railways with multiple companies. Or one private monopoly run by an autocrat.
If your call is longer than three minutes, "You're wasting airwaves."
How was this never accepted as a societal rule?
As mentioned in the video back then there wasn't a reserved band for mobile phones back then. You could interfere with a broadcast of emergency services.
Mobile phones back then didn't use the cellular radio techniques that made modern mobile phones possible. I'm more familiar with mobile history here in the US where one of the ways the reduced airtime was to charge an absolute fortune for it and even then you might find a pay phone prior to finding an available mobile phone channel. Prior to cellular a mobile phone base station had a range of about 25 miles and in some cities could only serve two calls at a time through two channels.
Cellular could handle hundreds of calls per base station, and served cells in three directions. In the early days each cell could 40-some channels, later 56 per phone company, but each base station served three cells. Cellular is a short range technology and it was possible to use the same channel 50 miles away where the old system required a 150 mile or more distance prior to re-using the same channel. This increased capacity meant that such limits weren't necessary. I haven't even touched on the digital technologies such as GSM which vastly increased capacity even further.
When they first came out you get your chat time down. I once ended up on the phone for an hour whilst in France in 1995. That one call cost over a hundred quid and I had to bill the customer for it.
I've felt a great disturbance in the force as if millions of Karens asked to talk to a manager due to limiting their rights for longer conversations.
Well, people are too paranoid now to speak over the phone, they'd rather text, so... ☎️ 🤔
Watching this reminds me of just how great a programme Tomorrows World really was.
This prototype was UK made though, thus TW was technically accurate in their framing.
It would be another decade before the first Cellular Network was set up in the UK.
*Tomorrow's* World.
@@TugIronChief But they were not mass market; just an idea that didn't catch on then.
@@TSR1989FF Absolutely correct.
^ Spam Bot much?
It’s a pity it doesn’t still cut off after 3 minutes. It would stop people talking a load of bollocks on the phone
you're not wrong hahaha
Wasting airwaves. What a wonderful idea
Do people still talk on the phone?
@@Mxyzptlksac
🤣🤣 no! My partner shouts, for some reason he gets louder than he usually is...and has the bloody thing on speaker, so everyone hears everything. Totally oblivious to anyone else’s needs. 🤦♀️
Spoiler Alert: The camera man is recording this on his smartphone.
No silly he is recording on a Nokia he forgot his smartphone at home
Lol
... with retro effect.
@@nshaidang99😛 yes..we need to ask what app he is using, looks like real film
@@stiannobelisto573
He use BBC app, you can see its watermark in the upper left corner :D
As soon as the cameras stopped rolling, somebody called to ask whether he'd been in an accident in the last three years.
Or which is your current utilities supplier
Classic... well done 😂😂
😂😂😂
Someone calling themselves "David Parker" (with the strongest Indian accent you have ever heard) calls him from British Leyland Automotive Dealings and tells him that he has overpaid on his 1977 Austin Maxi. But the refund cheque they posted him has too much money on it so he has to repay them with Grace Brothers gift cards.
Very funny, that made my day - or PPI
it will never catch on
Micky Browne not while we have good clean phone boxes!
Micky Browne The suit or the phone?
Ya especially without a headphone jack!
c4pc #crapple
Micky Browne or flappy bird
The irony is today's phones are used for everything but phone calls.
Brainwashing mostly.
How true. We seemed to have lost the art of conversation
Used to have brilliant times in the pub and great fun too
Social media is such an evil thing that recommends stuff that don't open your mind. Group-x will get more group-x media that is hate for group-y, just because hate sells more.
@@carolynellis387 so true 👍
@@carolynellis387 ah jeez lads stop being so melodramatic. The pub, yea where people used to sit sometimes all day.. the good old days :)
I still have great conversations with friends, in fact I can contact friend I live nowhere near now. Also family abroad. Can do my online banking, shop, even watch RUclips videos and am subscribed to many educational channels. Have learned how to do minor plumbing, electrical work, some wood work in the new house we bought. Can research things, translate things. Snap picture memories.
Not all is bad, relax! Your parents thought the music you listened to as a child was the end of the world. Past generations always think the future is strange/bad 🙄 nothing in this world is simply black and white.
Sure social media(FB, Twitter and the likes due to unregulated forums can be a cesspit) hence why I choose not to use them. you too have a choice not to 👍🏽
The opening part sounds like he's filling for words on a 2000 word essay
Sounds like me when I'm trying to make up sentences just to hear my own voice
the point was that he could talk and move around lol... it would have blown your mind in the 70s.
In 1988 I was hitch hiking back from Glastonbury Festival. A chap in a posh Aston Martin convertible stopped and gave me a lift. It was a hot day so he had the roof down. Along the journey he asked if I knew anyone who I could get some weed from, which I did.
The novelty was he had a telephone in his car he allowed me to use to call my mate. It was quite a thing to use a phone in the car and when I spoke to my mate, he didn't believe me.
Needless to say I got lift all the way home and a nice little present for myself for helping.
And here I am watching this video on my computer, using my phone as a mobile hotspot.
Ha and that's how different technology is today.
ok but almost 40 years later and half the planet thinks its a flat planet,
jokes are outlawed,
fat is beautiful,
ill settle for the old ways to your hotspot any day lol ;-)
@@MacStoker People think the world is flat again,
People are arrested for telling a joke,
life expectancy is less than it was 10 years ago, fats back.
we are going backwards,
the old days wont be long.
I'm just watching it on the phone.
@@rdouthwaite and the phone is watching you
These were later sold as a kit which included :
The handset , the radio, and grey flannel jacket with phone hook and coin box.
Only $999.99
you get only a flimsy shit phone for 300 bucks more these days.drop it and you'll pay a premium
I'm pretty sure the price would've been much higher than that. Probably more than $5000. Early mobile phones were expensive.
Then Apple wrapped it in tin foil and started charging $9999999.99 for theirs. Except you couldn't dial out. And you could only use it facing north. And you could only use it if you had a subscription to Beezer comic.
The replies are hilarious
Oh my, a mobile phone with a built in fidget spinner. They were more innovative back then than I thought!
There are rotary phone dial apps available 😄
I absolutely adore how it's just. a phone. a regular phone receiver with a cord and everything. I feel like I'm looking at the first frog to evolve like yes buddy! You can do it!!!!
YES BRING BACK TOMMOROWS WORLD, -GOOD QUALITY TV !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Michael Rodd, the Fresh face of Tomorrows World !
But not on the paedophile supporting BBC!
Also bring back The Great Egg Race.
Can’t do. Tomorrow has gone.
Wow I wish today's shows were as focused and informative as this! Everything today is over simplified and with flashy graphics and music detracting from the content. Eh, I must be getting old.
I agree. They didn't feel the need to make everything into a pop video in those days. TV shows could be serious.
Click, on BBC is much in this spirit.
Besides that; I'm rather sure, that a lot of viewers, back in 1979, where not all that convinced about the viability of a wearable telephone. -But it certainly was viable :3
well this is BBC UK and not for the US audience. BBC always has had more sophisticated programming, IMO.
That's because there were no "shows" back then. Instead, there was a range of "programmes".
That might seem like a trivial difference in linguistics, but it's really much more than that.
I blame the USA for popularising brainless "shows".
Today they don't make tech programmes like tomorrow's world...
When I was a young office guy in London back in the seventies I would go out with my colleagues for our one hour lunch break each day to the local pub (I worked near Wardour Street, great times). Generally 2 pints, sometimes 3 and on the odd Friday 4 when we could sneak in an extra 15 minutes or so (yes we would have all been sacked in today's politically correct and overly safety obsessive world). Once out of the office we were not contactable and for that 1 hour we were able to totally relax. I then remember the company bringing pagers in. I was quite amazed standing in the pub when one of my senior colleagues pager started to beep. Well that was the beginning of the end really; soon after came the mobile phones (those old bricks haha), computers and all the rest of the technology. The world today is all go go go but I was lucky enough to have sampled the old world, slow slow slow; I know which world I preferred!
Good old days, I've started leaving my phone somewhere I can't hear or see it when I'm at home.
I feel less stress and more relaxed
Which one?
I would like to live in that era....😏
The new world, as you call it, and its technology, is responsible for countless new job opportunities, though. Even though you are right to say we now live in a much faster world, I don't really mind it that much. It still allows for a lot of free time and a decent living.
a slow motion car crash
41 years on, I’m watching this video on a pocket-size iPhone while sending this comment round the world.
As with old-fashioned phone calls, I could have spent my time more productively.
Pocket sized? What other sizes does apple do 🤣
Invented to talk to each other, now used to ignore each other.
oH mY gOd iM sO eDgY
I'm 14 and this is deep
@Dominic Currie Deeper than Eddie Murphy going deep deep undercover.
@ Bruce Kennedy -You’ve nailed it!
I really wish i'd said that! Brilliant.....and true.
Absolutely love this. It's crazy watching this and seeing how far technology has come. Now if only we could get a rotary dial app for your smartphones!
You are welcome
itunes.apple.com/us/app/universal-rotary-dialer/id548029532?mt=8
Might not have been the case 7 years ago, but a simple search in both the Apple and Google app stores now turn out plenty of apps for that.
I love "archive" videos like this. It just shows how much times have changed over the decades. Really appreciate the posting! :)
Farm gates haven’t changed though !
It’ll never take off.
who would want to talk to someone while driving or out in public where others can hear them. i’ll take my phone calls in the privacy of my own kitchen
😂😂😃😂😃😂😃😂😃😂😃
How charming the 70's seem from this side of the clock.
They weren't
Thatcher just came in. Need I say more.....
If you discount all the peadophiles on tv
Everything was great before Thatcher wasn't it? Unions had the country by the bollocks, winter of discontent. Yeah life was great under labour wasn't it?
@@thefacelessmen2101 They damn well were!coolest decade ever.
I bet it gets better battery life than my iPhone.
But you can't beat a would-be mugger to death with an iPhone. Yin and Yang.
Patryk Wieczorek Yeah they had things like cameras back then, and people greeted strangers, pondered their life, and observed nature.
Books are too fast.
This thing was analog... very bad on battery life.
it was a joke, buzz kill much?
I liked the days when you couldn't get in touch with someone. The world has lost its mystery.
+Andy M Not if you unplug the Ethernet Cable..... ;) People EVERYWHERE will be wondering where you are, or what you're doing....... :3
+Andy M Cycling in the remote countryside isn't really the adventure it was.
We still get punctures and stuff and rained on, no smartphone can prevent all that, but the sense of being "cut off" from family and civilisation has gone.
+Andy M Agreed. I'm only 28, I work in IT, and even I think we're just too closely connected. People get upset or start looking for you if you don't respond to them within seconds and that's really sad as well as irritating. Even in the 90s as a kid, people could go hours doing their own thing completely cut off from the world - and it was bliss.
+Clarissa McPigeon Same. We depend too fast on the technology and it's not without its faults. We get impatient. I used to not bother with a mobile in 2003 cos i was old school. Never had one permanent till 2004.
You know what i hate about these friggin "smartphones"? You have to be a smart ARSE to navigate them and also to put up with texting naturally, Sick of fixing spelling errors. And the advertising. And. And etc
When he says "A dialling tone" one can imagine a whole generation looking confused.
And then watching him dialling... " wtf that turny thing? "
Can't wait for this to come out. Making a call in the park. Incredible.
It will never work. A mobile phone. Ha ha. Never work
Valery Willis send from my iPhone.
I know right? What's next? A global electric information superhighway where you can text with others and watch videos? Hah! Silly people.
Máté Zsiros Exactly, it seems too complicated for it's own good, we should just keep writing letters, and take down even more trees
We should never have come down from the trees, let alone wrote letters and cut the trees down to make paper - then have to recycle the paper to make more paper so that we can plant more trees.
Next week there was a typewriter attached to the handset to allow mobile telemessages to be sent.
I concur with your thoughts, Sir. It will never happen or be a reality, at least not in our lifetime. Should you wish to listen to some nice music, Sir you may always turn the dial on your wireless for some smashing music. As for me I do not envisage your science fiction being reality anytime soon, only as some fantastic dream concocted by your childlike imagination. You may as well state that we could fly to the moon in a rocket and talk to people on Earth. No, Sir these are fanciful things for young children to imagine and not for adults to delve into such fantasies.👴
It's nice to see Essex in 1979. No false tans, grating voices or tacky shops in sight.
This is the northern part of Essex though, it's the southern part that you want to avoid ;-)
Ben Shahrabi - FlipBen ProductionsYes, Although Danbury is still quite unspoilt to this day.
Ben Shahrabi - FlipBen Productions that's because they didn't exist yet
I would give anything for it to be 1979 again. Today's world is a joke, for the most part. :-/
Exactly. Completely agree, as someone born and living in South Essex.
My friends opened the first mobile phone shop in Ipswich. On their opening day, I told one of them that I thought it was unlikely to be a success because there'd be no demand for them. "There's a phone box on every corner if you need to contact someone," I said. I've never been more wrong.
My mobile is always on charge, might as well be a landline.
Haki Kaki That’s true and the reason is because you don’t make calls anymore with a phone. My first cellphone, a Motorola flip-phone lasted for days and the batteries I carried with me actually were spares.
Haki kaki
Me too, if I unplugged the charger I'd have an hour tops. Needles to say I now have a (home phone).
Then you are using it to much put it down and get a life.
Haki Kaki is it? Get a better one then.
As someone with local knowledge i should confirm that Danbury is the tallest hill in the area and on a clear day can be seen from Chelmsford. They thought this shoot through quite well!
The logo on the side of the van at the start indicates it's an Essex County Council vehicle (not the one that 'Bad News Tour' used...)
Chelmsford also boasts a 300ft Chain Home Radar tower that was re-located there from the coast in the 'fifties, for experimental purposes. I have a sneaking suspicion the test transmission used this to good advantage too..
The Chelmer Institute is sadly now gone but I believe was assimilated into what is now ARU's Chelmsford base. I could be wrong though.
Wonder what became of Liz Charnock?
Absolutely amazing! How do you think they would have reacted in 1979 if they knew I was one day watching this video on a smartphone using mobile data in the middle of countryside! Incredible!
David Lister I doubt they would be very surprised, given how rapidly technology had advanced in the previous 30 years or so.
nkt1 : You're correct, in general. Some stuff was sadly disappointing, ( manned space missions, etc. ) but some stuff has been a delight.
And when you take into account that your 3 million years into deep space it's even more impressive..
They would have told you to stop wasting your money and get WiFi
witchcraft
I still don’t understand how they work even now . Absolutely no idea . It’s impossible.
Think thay were pretending, or he had a car battery stuffed in his back,
Micheal Rodd a 70s presenter it's still ok to like
At least he didn't sexually molest corpses
He touched me......too soon?
Yes I was about to say the obvious why cos he didn't abuse any kids.. But it was obviously inferred in the comment and thus didn't need pointing out even tho I did. Haha
www.parliamentspeakers.com/Speaker/Michael+Rodd
That some top notch modern tech right there, I'm gonna head straight down to woolworths in my Austin p6 whilst listening to my favourite cassette tape to purchase this wonderful device.
+Brownier I think you mean 8-track.
+YujiUedaFan they had cassette tapes in the 70's
*****
The only time I saw the 70s was in Life on Mars UK.
Brownier *rover p6
Have played Pong yet lol
The technology has advanced at an unimaginable paced while the human intelligence has gone in the opposite direction.
This statement contradicts itself...
@@hashtag_thisguy just because you have a smart phone doesn't mean you"re smart is what he's trying to say.
You've hit the anilin the head for the cherry picking nonsense that is the theory of evolution, massive leaps and bounds have taken place in technology but where is the evolution of our society or country, its been dumbed down and repressed.
You should live in Australia, even worse.
So true
Very interesting to see what came before the famous brick phone in 1983, am surprised they still used an old fashion rotary dialer instead of push button dialer which was already available in the 70s
This is most likely so you don't push the buttons too fast. The bandwidth they worked with was super low and very slow.
@@Syntax.error. oooh that's why, thank you
Push button dialling or DTMF wasn't common in the UK until later on. Pulse dialling lasted a long time
@@Spookieham Still works, even on our full fibre "Digital Voice" line..!
Christ I saw this the first time around. I was just a kid. The world has changed at a frightening pace. Not always for the better.
I lived in New Zealand in 1973 and I had to book a call to the uk at Christmas time. and it wasn't cheap either . now we have skype and its free.
How does it feel to have lived in an era when so much has changed so fast? Genuinely curious as I am much younger.
@@sailenkatel3436 I really wonder about all the change witnessed by people in earlier decades. My great great grandmother was born about 1860 when the US Civil War was happening, and she died about 1960 when Elvis Presley and television existed. From horses to automobiles, and candles to electricity, telephones, movies, television. And the changes in politics and society back then.... Wow. As for my own life, I am surprised how fashion and music seem to have changed very little in the past 25 years, compared to the huge changes between 1950 and 1975. Seems bizarre how little these things have changed. But the changes brought by computers, internet, mobile phones are massive. We knew computers would have a huge effect on the future, but we really didnt know in what ways. We had seen that electricity had a huge effect on society from the 1800s to 1970, so we knew computers would have a huge effect in the future. Thankfully sentient computers have not taken control of society (at least not yet) like in some dystopian movies like The Matrix and Terminator. It is harder to learn new things as you get older, but slowly I have picked up the technology that matters in my life (I use an iPhone extensively with my job) but other aspects of technology I dont need to bother with (video gaming, facebook). Time does seem to pass faster when you are older. The last 10 years really seem to have flown by. You kind of get used to people much younger than you knowing more about technology than you do. Its just the way things are. When you are young you have spare time to learn all the newest tech, and when you are older you are too busy with work and other things in life to learn all the constantly changing tech. Some of it changes so fast its not worth learning about (like that stupid original version of Windows 8, - what a waste of time that was). Thanks to science fiction we have a rough idea of what might be coming (1960s Star Trek with its Communicators (mobile phones) and then 1990s Star Trek with its touch screen computers and interactive talking computers ). In the next several decades I imagine more use of self-driving cars, holograms, greater use of DNA technology, genetic engineering of individuals etc. Star Trek's replicators might happen to a small degree (3D printers) but probably will not be able to replicate food or living creatures. So anyways if we start to see these things in the future I wont be 100% shocked. Even in the 1960s I read some futurists were predicting that waves of migration into Europe and the West would become a very big issue, whereas in the 1960s that issue was less significant.
If only someone would have told him
That in 50years
This video would be watched on a mobile phone
The look on his face would have been priceless
Michael Rodd is still alive. He probably is watching this himself on his iphone and is having a good laugh...
40 years actually!
Well... not watching on, using it to broadcast to the telly.
In another 50 years, you dont need to watch anything, it will be directly transponded into your brain and it will gives you the experience and knowlege
People actually not only imagined but also counted on the future inventions step by step that would gradually lead to gadgets such as modern smart phones
This is total BS. How can a phone work wireless??
Yeah and look how hard it is to send digital data...! 😀
It's wizardry is what it is
It's witchcraft :D
They can't.
They're still in prototype.
They had a better reception in 1969 from the moon
Why did I think the guy in the thumbnail was Jonathan Pie?
That rotary dial brings back fond memories of "speed" calling into radio stations to win valuable prizes and free concert tickets!
Lame prize
We used to dial all the numbers except for the last and hope it didn't cut out before they called it open for calls on the radio.
I remember sitting through this waiting patiently for Top Of The Pops to come on
smith23 Aaaaahhh Thursday nights. Good times
And it used to be on just after The Kenny Everett Show
yep.....back in the innocent days ☺
smith23 this show then Jimmy Savile presenting Cliff Richard, bbc peadophile rings peak days.
Blondie Heart of glass and Gary's Gang keep on dancing were part of the show.🤡🤡🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🌕🌕☄🔥😁😁😁😁😁😁
Call is cut off after 3 minutes? I need to give my wife one of these.
😂😂😂
Bruh 😂
And the cost of a call back then
Even this has an audio jack where the latest smartphones don't.
People walking around the streets talking to a plastic box it will never work you would look ridiculous never catch on
Meh - I was a good 5 years ahead of him.
Google "Wellington Walkie".
I used to love Tomorrow's World. I remember as a kid in the 70s my brother explaining to me about the invention of videos in the future. It seemed too good to be true that one day you would be able to watch any film you wanted instead of waiting to see it at the cinema (or listening to it on a record and reading the book). And now you have to explain to children what a video recorder and record is! (And a book if we're not careful).
Can you imagine if he held it up and started pouting for a picture
In 1975 for a school paper i predicted cell phones would be everywhere soon. My teacher wrote: delusional.
Get in contact with the delusional teacher if he/she is still alive
Arthur C Clarke wrote about cell phones in the 60s . Nikola Tesla predicted the mobile phone in 1901 and predicted the smart phone in 1926 , you say you predicted the cell phone in 1975 makes me wonder if you had read and watched 2001: a space odyssey, both written book and film came out in 1968
what do you want? a medal?
@@grahamsanderson8053 that will do nicely thank you! Oops! I'm thinking of American Express. Dunce cap for me, no medal.
It goes to show that teachers don't know everything! When I was in primary school in 1992 I had to write about what I did on the weekend; our city had just got Toys R Us, newly opened, and I talked about going in there. My teacher marked me down for writing the 'R' backwards. They know jack shit.
The Home Office did make the bandwidth available eventually, with the first official UK mobile phone call made from St Katherine Docks to Newbury, 1st January 1985. The mobile network was Vodaphone, with British Telecom (the former General Post Office) being really slow to take up the challenge of creating the UK's first Mobile phone network.
They're still dragging their feet! The UK is far behind most other in-country 4G networks. If we could get our infrastructure back on track perhaps we could push overlaying technologies with more confidence and maybe, just maybe, lead the way with future innovations.
Matty112uk ... Vodafone haven't learnt much in 30 years, I have to lean against the patio doors to get just one bar on my smartphone, if it wasn't for the tree line I would be able to see the nearest cell tower it's about 600 yds away, other phone sims Vectone, EE and 02 all show 3 bars or better !
I agree, not been on Vodafone for years myself either. They were still much faster at getting a mobile network up and running than BT were. Of course, having a network is one thing, making it a good one is something else! :)
Wasn't it Ernie Wise the comedian who made the first call?
Wasn't it Ernie Wise the comedian who made the first call?
I apologise for interrupting you, this is a test on the radio, over and out!! LOL! the most polite prank call in history!!!
There was a really great time when we had cellular phones that used analog signals mostly back in the 1980's and 1990's.
Those were great fun times for people who had radio scanners that could be easily modified to pick up those frequencies.
There was no encryption for cell phones at the time and people that used cellular phones were being listened to by a lot of other people so they didn't have a private conversation. Often times hilarious pranks were pulled on the owners.
Yes, I had one of those scanners back around the mid 80's. I recall the majority of the conversations in the evenings were business men on their way home from work either arranging dates with their mistresses or thanking them for a great night previously, whilst driving home to wifey and a cooked meal on the table.
@@tonysmith1682 Back in those days it was only really yuppie wideboys and fat cats who were into mobile phones in a big way. They are exactly the sort of person to engage in that sort of behaviour.
Look how far we have come in mobile phone technology from 1979 to 2021, amazing.
At least that mobile phone didn't bend in his pocket.
And it didn't explode...
Because it's already bent...
This is the very same Michael Rodd with his legendary tape-driven satnav from eight years earlier. Looks a lot older in this clip.
And also this wasn't a "mobile phone" in the modern sense. This was basically just a tricked-out walkie talkie that could connect by radio into the conventional PSTN. But it was a very good start and laid the groundwork for what we take for granted today.
Watching this on a mobile telephone 40 years later.
What we have now is not a phone, it’s really a computer. It does not utilize any technologies from the phone in the video.
You thank Apple. USA
"It does not utilise any technologies from the phone in the video"
Largely because some of the key technologies underlying traditional voice telephony have changed since then (e.g. how numbers are transmitted through the system). However, the basic flowchart is similar - information is converted to radio waves, transmitted to a receiver, which converts it back to an electrical signal, which after passing through more equipment, interfaces with the traditional telephone network (and vice versa).
Plus, some of the technological limitations of that prototype were baked in due to a combination of the frequency it was using (probably shared with numerous other applications) and lack of encryption - the idea being to minimise the amount of radio bandwidth used.
Amazingly I just realised this fact reading your comment. 🤣
@@Jwdude123 you mean BlackBerry. They were really the first I'm smartphones
There's something so Alan Partridge about Michael Rodd's delivery...
Funny - watched several Partridge clips, then this one and thought the same!
He's even got the gate....the country gate
I was thinking its like something of brass eye lol or the day today show
Ah haaa!!
I think it's the earnestness of the man, strolling out into the wilds of Essex to make a pioneering phone call on a 'Bakelite' mobile phone, that cracks me up.
Shame this technology didn't go anywhere, looks so convenient. I suppose the carrier pigeons will have to do for a while longer.
funny lol
Next time I answer the phone I'm going to say "Hello, who is this?"
I've always done it.
@liam B Pro move is to do it on an outgoing call.
Forget the phone I'm just loving the reel to reel tape player/recorder.
A remarkable little film, right at the birth of digital communications and the web, how far we've come 45 years, i feel privileged to have lived long enough to see electronics progress from cumbersome valve based stuff to devices that contain multi billion semiconductor equivalents of them that can do almost anything, and yet still fit in a shirt pocket, a pity such technology has also brought immense social change and not always for the better, perhaps we as the end users now need to undergo the same evolution to make ourselves as good as our technology.
The irony of watching this video on a smartphone.
I think that's why it's being shown
It's like rain on your wedding day.
Do you know what irony is?
Despite him heavily stressing the 'digital information' aspect, it was based on analogue transmission. Connecting a mobile device to a PTSN (phone network) was mainly an issue of regulation and processing power.
i'm guessing he meant digital as in 'having to do with digits', ie the numbers he was dialing
Now you can be told “you’ve been in an accident” anywhere.
00:14 NAGRA Tape Recorder from Switzerland. Even today highly regarded and prices for used items are still extremely high.
Must have taken all afternoon to type out a text with that dial.
Pity mobile phones don't disconnect after three minutes nowadays - would stop all those annoying long conversations on buses and trains!
Bill Beer
No. That'd be a terrible feature.
Bill Beer Or if you really didn't want to continue speaking to someone!
Petty White
Yeah the Mrs 👍
There is a feature already, indicated by a red hang up icon.
Bill Beer imagine calling 999 and got put on hold😂😬
Wait that happens in London lol🤣🤣
It's good to see Michael Rodd again after all these years.
Yeh, nice man, presenter
He's now 78 years old, presumably retired although he still seems to do the odd public appearance here and there.
As recently as 2015 he was still running his own live events, video and production company.
5:14 "We've been trying to reach you regarding your car's extended warranty"
Automatic call termination after 3 minutes. Love the idea!
Still the case on the Band III MPT1327 trunked system we used at the bus company I used to work for.
1979 - This will help people talk to each other.
2020 - Porn and memes.
A new dawn (in communication) to youporn
And Pawn Stars.
Don't forget the online markets
No wonder they weaponized mobile devices 🤣🤌
4:22 - Call longer than 3 minutes get cut off to not clog up the air waves? What a time this was! 😂
before the days of Time division digital multiplex . there wasn't the free channels to support lots of calls ;) now they can have multiple conversations per channel.
And only 5 quid a minute!
:-/
It's long enough to say "I'm running late" or "can you ask Roger to pop along to Alison's in Luton". I remember the days of 25p a minute PAYG mobiles.
@@Rapscallion2009 50p/min on my first one.
@@TestGearJunkie. Yes. I remember how annoying holding was!
Great to see Michael Rodd & this old Tomorrows World piece. I used to love this. And Screen Test.
What I find amazing is that that little transceiver actually worked. I had a few of those and to be honest, they were pretty limited.
and the first thing he thought of doing was prank calling some random people,
This is wonderful. It’s like something off The Day Today with Chris Morris and Alan Partridge.
It’s funny, I was definitely getting Alan Partridge vibes myself 😀
Don't do cake
Ah the dashing Michael Rodd ❤ I loved 'screen test' with him too