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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    Pop hits were on 45's. And I couldn't wait to go to the store to check the latest releases.

    Phone calls from booths were 10 cents.

    The speed limit changed from 75 mph to 55 mph.

    It was so cool when I got my 10-speed Schwinn bike, with cable shifters. With real "racing" handlebars. Orange. (I miss that bike - she was stolen along with about 200 others locked up together in front of my dorm while a University student.)

    Terry Bradshaw was the big man on campus (LA Tech) before he got picked up by the Pittsburg Steelers. My Dad taught ROTC at LA Tech, and I went to the elementary school affiliated with the College's teaching program. So, I was a LA Tech student, at the age 7-11.

    Walking down the street with my Aunt's bank deposit from her flower shop. Now who in their right mind would have a young child walk anywhere these days with bank bag containing $1000?

    And the flowers for my Aunt's shop came weekly as cargo on the Trailway's bus. There was no FedEx. If a rural town wanted something, it came by bus.
    Beth

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Newport, RI
    Posts
    3,821
    I remember sleeping stretched out in the back of my parent's station wagon, coming home from the beach. Car seat?! Not even seat belts!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Singapore
    Posts
    307
    Quote Originally Posted by bmccasland View Post
    (I miss that bike - she was stolen along with about 200 others locked up together in front of my dorm while a University student.)
    how did all the bikes get stolen? at the same time??

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Beautiful NW or Left Coast
    Posts
    5,619
    I remember my delight when I found a 5cent pay phone in some backwoods town somewhere (the rest were 10 cents)
    We still had horse drawn wagons selling vegetables and picking up rags in Newark when I was 10 years old.
    And the milk man, the Dugan man (breads, cupcakes)
    I remember paying 12 cents for a bus ride.
    We'd get up early and watch the test signal on the television. It jumped around a lot.
    I like Bikes - Mimi
    Watercolor Blog

    Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
    Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
    Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    75

    I remember

    We had 2 digit phone numbers in the town where I grew up when I first learned to use the phone. My parents had a furniture store, and the store's number was 96. It was before dial telephones, and we told the operator the number we wanted. We had a private line, much better than having a party line where your neighbors could listen in on your calls.

    The local dairy made home deliveries. They had little forms like a checklist, and you filled it out and put it in this insulated box by your front door. They'd put your items in the box.

    Xerox machines had not yet been invented, and they still used carbon paper. When I was in college, I had a Smith Corona portable typewriter, and I used that correcting tape or eraseable paper to correct typing errors. Several years later, my first computer was an Apple IIe with a green screen, 5 1/4 inch floppy disks, and a matrix dot printer.

    When I was young the only people I had ever met who had tattoos were guys who had been in the navy. Pierced ears were considered a bit daring at that point.

    When I was in elementary school girls always wore dresses, never slacks and wearing shorts was really unheard of. If it was cold, we wore slacks under the dress. We had steam heat at our house and at school. In the winter we built snow forts and had snowball fights. If our mittens got wet, we'd lay them out on the radiator to dry.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Hey, I had a Smith Corona typewriter. Too bad I can't type!
    We had a knife man who came down the street ringing a bell to sharpen knives and a daily milkman when I was really little, like under 7. And this was in the suburbs. I remember when we became a 2 car family... I was about 6. My mom used to drive my dad to the train on Wednesdays, before that, so she could go to the grocery store.
    I remember watching the Mickey Mouse Club, with Annette Funicello (not Brittney), Bozo the Clown, Romper Room with Miss Jean, and Ding Dong School House. We had Mr. Nicolazzo to cut our lawn and once a couple of years ago, when I was shopping in the city where I grew up, I saw his truck! Well, it must be his grandson.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    1,627
    Having to roll a car window down with a hand crank vs just pushing a button
    I prefer the hand cranks


    rotary phones

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Troutdale, OR
    Posts
    2,600
    learning to drive my younger sister's CJ5 jeep with manual transmission with my dad siting next to me and telling me more gas and don't dump the clutch... and my sister sneering, snickering and laughing at me. She wanted the CJ5 cause that's what Mindy was driving in Mork & Mindy. I was car free till the 80's .

    Oh I also remember NYC subway tokens were 35 cents. I was in college then.

    And we weren't allowed to have even a simple four function calculator in exams. Well, back then simple four function calculators weren't all that simple. TI-50 calculator was one of the first scientific calculator. Initial price back in '72 or was it '73 was around $500.00.

    I used to know how to use the slide ruler. But haven't seen one since then.

    TVs had four available channels even though the dial said 2 through 13. We had ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS. oh TV screens had rounded corners too. I also remember taking vacume tubes (valves for brits and aussies) to the grocery store to check if the tubes had burnt out. It was trial and error to see which tube had burnt out.

    Life seemed simpler back then. And I wished to have a personal computer back then, before Apple II/IIe. Before Commodore 64 or even VIC20. First video game I saw was pong and thought wow that's really cool you can play games on your TV.

    And yes my term paper was all typed out. Editor used was smilingcat-editor not word. not word-perfect. not open office...
    Last edited by smilingcat; 07-15-2009 at 10:33 PM. Reason: better judgement.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Quote Originally Posted by solobiker View Post
    Having to roll a car window down with a hand crank vs just pushing a button
    Oh, and those little triangle windows that really didn't let much air in.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    I remember 1200 baud modems, and having to disassemble the phone jack to logon from hotel rooms.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    I remember modems that had a cradle that you put the phone receiver on!

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Yes, when my husband went back to school, to finish his BS, we got this "new fangled" technology, so he could do his homework at home, in that weird, new major, Computer Information Systems. I have a picture of my 6 month old son sitting at the terminal, banging his hands on the keyboard. We had to get the computer paper from some special place that would deliver it, so my DH could see his work. There was no monitor. 1983.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Eugene, OR
    Posts
    123
    Remember when everyone wasn't so tied to the phone, having to answer it, wherever they were? If you called someone and they weren't home, you left a message (or even further back, you tried again later). Now people get irritated with me if I don't answer the phone. Just because I can have it with me at all times, doesn't mean that I do, or that I want to talk on it at all times.

 

 

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