What childhood memories can reveal about our age?

  • Thread starter Evo
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Memories
In summary, the conversation revolved around members reminiscing about their childhood experiences, including watching limited TV channels, dealing with TV repairs, waiting for radio tubes to warm up, and playing with simple toys like rocks and mud. They also talked about popular culture, such as songs, movies, and fashion, during their teenage years. The conversation expressed a sense of nostalgia and amusement at how technology and society have changed over time.
  • #106
physics girl phd said:
I remember this... and I called the pre-broadcasting fuzz in the morning (before "Popeye" came on) "the ants"... and would "watch" it while I ate Cheerios and played with Legos. My favorite afternoon cartoon was "Tom And Jerry"... later "Voltron" (the lion one).[/B]
The ones I watched after the fuzz, was some sort of fractal or fractured http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YB1EE-FDgMk".
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #107
Evo said:
I remember the Water Wiggle and super balls, and that plastic ring..
I had http://www.hasbro.com/playdoh/en_US/" . I guess that's still around though. I don't remember seeing that Giant-Puff-of-Air toy, I would have wanted one of those o:)

Super Ball
We used our driveway like a baseball batting cage, hitting out softballs, whiffle balls, baseballs & tennis balls. I remember the day we tried a superball. One smack and I don't believe we ever found it again :uhh:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #108
fliback.jpg


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/1b/Magicrocks.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #109
My brother just called and was telling me that he still has one of those translucent colored 45s that were released for a time. In this case, it is Tom Petty in pink. A twenty-six year old saw it and didn't know what it was. He asked if it's a CD on steroids. :biggrin:
 
  • #110
I remember "in living color" the show whereni first saw Jim Carrey and Keenan Ivory Wayans and Damon Wayans.
 
  • #111
Did anyone ever get http://www.sea-monkey.com/" ?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #112
lisab said:
Did anyone ever get http://www.sea-monkey.com/" ?

Nope, had a barrel of monkeys... at least the siblings did.

Did anyone ever read the book, Animal Train, as a young child?

il_430xN.79624804.jpg

http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=27705790

Clickety Clack, Clickety Clack
The Animal Train goes down the track...

My mother would turn the pages while I recited the book from memory.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #113
I remember when the kids network nickelodeon only had 3 nicktoons

I remember when our classrooms provided only computers where floppy disks were the size of CD's and I remember you could only load one computer program up at a time rather than have computers programs open up simultaneously, which I later in life fondly referred to as the stick shift computers because you always had to swtich computer programs if you wanted to load a new computer program onto the PC .

I remember playing my first video game , bayou billy and being half way decent at the racing level and terrible at the walk through level
I remember NOT wanting to be in school and everybody noticing it.

I remember gettng all excited about changing from cable to satelitte service not realizing that most of those channels were sports or extra movie channels.

I remember OJ simpson being talked about on the news everyday and trying to understand why this guy was getting so much news coverage.

I remember when playstation was such a big deal and being enthralled there being playstation games that offered story lines that you could follow like a movie

I remember having sleepless nights due much to the bloodshed presented in mortal kombat 2 and 3 games , and being afraid that the mortal combat characters would jump out of my tv screen but ironically not being terrified by resident evil 2 games that came out on the playstation which were even more violent.
 
Last edited:
  • #114
I in addition to no running hot water at my grandparents house, we had to go outside to the loo (outhouse). We used to play with the daddy-longlegs or spiders while sitting on the loo.
 
  • #115
I loved playing with ants, and making sand castles and tunnels.
 
  • #116
I remember that I loved this little horsey I’m holding in the pic

http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/984/p10005788.jpg

Can’t recall the name of that cartoon though
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #117
lisab said:
Did anyone ever get http://www.sea-monkey.com/" ?
Were they something like brine shrimp?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #118
Ivan Seeking said:
Nope, had a barrel of monkeys... at least the siblings did.

Did anyone ever read the book, Animal Train, as a young child?

Clickety Clack, Clickety Clack
The Animal Train goes down the track...

My mother would turn the pages while I recited the book from memory.
I didn't have that one, but did have similar ones.
One of my favorites was a Seuss book called http://www.best-childrens-books.com/mcelligots-pool.html" .
My brother & I would recite that one without opening the book.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #119
drizzle said:
I remember that I loved this little horsey I’m holding in the pic

http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/984/p10005788.jpg

Can’t recall the name of that cartoon though
My little pony? I think my children watched that.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #120
Here a few early memories of TV shows. I remember the night when Disneyland, the TV show, moved from Wednesday to Friday night. I loved Walt Disney. He would come on at the end of the show and talk for a while. He was like a third grandfather. I remember the Mickey Mouse Club. I remember Howdy Doody. I remember a lot of TV westerns like Roy Rogers, Gene Autry, Hopalong Cassidy, and others. I remember Sky King.
 
  • #121
physics girl phd said:
...although it was rather bad that the printer only had a capital letter font (with larger capitals for true capitalization). That printer also used http://www.thegreenoffice.com/office_supplies/UNV15708" of course.
[/B]

Would that be the Dump-110?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #122
Ivan Seeking said:
Nope, had a barrel of monkeys... at least the siblings did.

Did anyone ever read the book, Animal Train, as a young child?

Clickety Clack, Clickety Clack
The Animal Train goes down the track...

My mother would turn the pages while I recited the book from memory.

I don't think I ever read that. But the set of encyclopedias we had also had a set of children's books, with different volumes having songs, poems, stories, etc.

I remember paging through the children's stories, reciting the stories as best I could from memory back before I could read. I used to try and sing all the songs in the book, as well, which was hard even after I could read, since I couldn't read music (other than to know high notes were higher and low notes were lower) and hadn't actually heard some of those songs. I also learned my alphabet and how to count on those encyclopedias.
 
  • #123
I had the Childcraft Encyclopedia set:

http://www.loganberrybooks.com/solved-childcraft.jpg

I think we still have most of the volumes.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #124
noblegas said:
I remember when our classrooms provided only computers where floppy disks were the size of CD's and I remember you could only load one computer program up at a time rather than have computers programs open up simultaneously, which I later in life fondly referred to as the stick shift computers because you always had to swtich computer programs if you wanted to load a new computer program onto the PC .

Wow, we didn't have computers when I was in school. But, as an adult, I remember borrowing irreplaceable floppies from coworkers. Those floppies had a hole in the disk that the computer used to physically find the start of the disk. When I'd return disks, I used to line that hole up with the window and then carefully run a thumbtack through the front of the paper cover, through the hole in the disk, and through the back cover and tack it to their bulletin board with a note of thanks. Just to get their blood flowing, you know.

Of course, the downside to that was that the less computer literate would see something like that and think thumbtacking their floppies to the bulletin board was a good way to keep from losing them.
 
  • #125
BobG said:
Those floppies had a hole in the disk that the computer used to physically find the start of the disk.

I guess you mean the hole I am pointing at with this random piece of paper - but do you mean this type of floppy disk?

8FD.jpg
 
  • #126
Okay. Are you old enough to have ever used one of these?

http://www.8trackheaven.com/Images/autophonic4trackautoplayer.jpg

Note the lever to engage the capstan wheel.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #127
When I was a kid, computers filled buildings. I had a hand-held "calculator" of sorts that could only add and subtract. You manipulated internal notched slides with a metal stylus. Add on one side, flip over and subtract on the other. I got it in a box-lot in an auction held in the barn beside my house when I was a kid.

Actually, when I got to engineering school, computers *still* filled buildings. You'd write out your code by hand, check it for consistency and form, then try to get time on one of the IBM punch-card writers. Punch in your code, bundle the cards with a rubber band, and drop them off with one of the computer "priests" who might or might not run your code during the next day or so. Hopefully, you'd be rewarded with a nice fat stack of white and green striped fanfold printout paper. If not, time to debug and try again. No calculators were allowed - the cheapest ones around were 4-function Bowmars, and they were over $300. The engineering department thought that the prohibitive cost would give rich kids an unfair advantage, so they made everybody use slide rules instead.
 
  • #128
The earliest presidential election I can recall was in 1988. My parents voted for Dukakis.

I remember receiving a Nintendo Entertainment System for Christmas when it first came out.

The first war I remember was Operation Desert Storm. Colin Powell and Norman Schwartzkopf were heroes.

I remember when my family bought their first PC in 1993. It was a Packard Bell 486 that ran a funny program called DOS. All of the games came on floppy disks.
 
  • #129
Brian_C said:
All of the games came on floppy disks.

You are a kid! Original games came on tapes.

puszka_pandory.jpg
 
  • #130
Borek said:
You are a kid! Original games came on tapes.

Punched_tape.jpg


We loaded programs and the OS on our computer in hs using paper tape.

When I first started in the field, our CAT scanner's operating systems were loaded using paper tape. I saw punch card systems in other apps but never used them.
 
Last edited:
  • #131
:rofl::rofl::rofl: You're killing me guys! I swear I'll do whatever if there's another rustier one
 
  • #132
Ivan Seeking said:
Punched_tape.jpg


We loaded programs and the OS on our computer in hs using paper tape.

When I first started in the field, our CAT scanner's operating systems were loaded using paper tape. I saw punch card systems in other apps but never used them.
Yep - I know about the punch tape. I watched some programmers doing lunar simulations for the moon landing. It the program was on punch tape. I believe that was one of first widely available video games - lunar lander.

And before punch tape, we had to use

http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/obj/iit-iti/images/vit-tiv/tablets-a-a-nocolor-large.jpg

:biggrin:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #133
Astronuc said:
http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/obj/iit-iti/images/vit-tiv/tablets-a-a-nocolor-large.jpg

:biggrin:

Wow, you are much older than I thought.

I remeber folding punch tape to make stars for Christmas, but the killer application was to punch holes in such a way that you can read I LOVE JOLA (Jolana) or something similar.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #134
Astronuc said:
...And before punch tape, we had to use

http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/obj/iit-iti/images/vit-tiv/tablets-a-a-nocolor-large.jpg

:biggrin:

Is this serious? :rofl: You got to be kidding me Astronuc
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #135
drizzle said:
Is this serious? :rofl: You got to be kidding me Astronuc

The card feeders were problematic - the oxen often wouldn't cooperate.
 
  • #136
Evo said:
Banana seats on bicycles.

I had the Cactus Rose Huffy. Googling it, I see it's available on craigslist down in Chattanooga. I could go get it now for little E! (Except she's too little, and we don't have room.)

IMGP9835.jpg
 
  • #137
Little E won't be little for long physics girl. Better get it now.
 
  • #138
http://www.105classics.net/105classics/jsp/images/photogallery/supercult/gallery115/vic20andtv.jpg
http://gaijin.dmst.aueb.gr/~bkarak/weblog/2008/17052008/amiga.jpg
http://cmsreport.com/files/images/Commodore64_350px.jpg
http://www.pocketgadget.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/slinky.jpg
http://www.theoldcomputer.com/Libraries/Emulation/Coleco/ColecoVision.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #139
Everyone, please size your photos to 640 x 480. Otherwise it offsets the entire page.

You can set the upload to resize automatically at places like imageshack.
 
  • #140
I don't have any memories from my childhood.

No really.

So it's kinda fun, and sad, reading other people's.

Well I do have some memories, but they're either trivial or creepy

Take your pick.
 

Similar threads

Replies
64
Views
15K
  • Art, Music, History, and Linguistics
Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
239
  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • General Discussion
Replies
9
Views
5K
  • Biology and Medical
Replies
28
Views
83K
Replies
33
Views
7K
  • STEM Career Guidance
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
Replies
6
Views
14K
  • MATLAB, Maple, Mathematica, LaTeX
Replies
8
Views
3K
Back
Top