What Old Technology Has Been Replaced by Modern Innovations?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around various old technologies that have been replaced or significantly transformed by modern innovations. Participants share personal anecdotes and memories related to outdated technologies across different domains, including household items, entertainment, transportation, and communication.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants recall metal toothpaste tubes as a past technology.
  • Pull tabs on Coke cans are mentioned as an example of replaced technology.
  • Radios with vacuum tubes that required warm-up time are discussed.
  • Eight-track tapes that would change tracks mid-song are noted as an outdated format.
  • One participant humorously mentions the internet being steam-powered.
  • Memories of cars with unpadded steel dashboards and no seat belts are shared.
  • Handheld calculators are recalled as a technology that did not exist in the past.
  • Participants reminisce about programming using punch cards and waiting for print-outs.
  • Typewriters and the issues with type bars getting tangled are discussed.
  • Old cigarette lighters that required naphtha and flints are mentioned.
  • Remote controls for TVs that were connected by wires are recalled.
  • Memories of early TV viewing experiences, including black and white broadcasts, are shared.
  • Some participants discuss the evolution of record players and the use of 78s.
  • There are mentions of nostalgic experiences related to food products and local stores.
  • Several participants reflect on historical events and societal norms from their childhoods.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants share a variety of personal memories and experiences related to old technologies, but there is no consensus on specific items or the accuracy of certain recollections. Disagreements arise regarding the timeline of technological advancements and the accuracy of memories related to television broadcasts.

Contextual Notes

Some statements contain assumptions about the timeline of technological changes and personal experiences that may not be universally applicable. There are also references to specific historical events and societal practices that may not be fully explained.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in the history of technology, nostalgia for past innovations, or personal anecdotes related to technological change may find this discussion engaging.

  • #211
turbo-1 said:
I remember when we got our first TV. We didn't have to get up to change channels, because there was only one channel that we could get, and that one wasn't too reliable. Most of the time, they showed an American Indian in the cross-hairs, with a very boring sound-track.

Hey, what are you watchin'?

I don't know, it's a movie about Indians, but it's really boring.

Hey man, that's not a movie, man. That's a test pattern, man!

Far out.

(How come PF doesn't have a test pattern when the server is down for maintenance and/or upgrades?)
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
  • #212
remeber the tv show on Nickelodeon, "You Can't Do that on Television!" Finally something funny from Canada, eh
 
  • #213
turbo-1 said:
I remember when we got our first TV. We didn't have to get up to change channels, because there was only one channel that we could get, and that one wasn't too reliable. Most of the time, they showed an American Indian in the cross-hairs, with a very boring sound-track.

I once ended a PowerPoint presentation with this...and no one knew what it was!

slnoux.jpg
 
  • #214
Ivan Seeking said:
Who collected Blue Chip Stamps? And what were the other [green] ones... S&H, or something like that?

S&H green stamps, ah the memories.

I remember when there were 3 major TV networks and 4 major automakers in the U.S.
 
  • #215
- Manual choke on your car

- Three Star and Four Star petrol

- Mega Bass (which was on my first ever Sony Walkman and made Bon Jovi sound amazing)

- My dad's first fax machine (which had a flatbed scanner and needed a separate phone to dial the number).

- Rabbit mobile phones (which had to be a few metres from a transmitter)

- Soda Stream

-
 
  • #216
separate starter pedal (right by the left side of the firewall) - starter circuit not integrated into the key/ignition system.
 
  • #217
Gasoline mixture control on gas pumps. You could select any ratio between regular and premium.

Leaded fuels: To this day, I still tell the pump attendent to "fill it with regular unleaded".
 
  • #218
I remember when the big signs in front of McDonalds' restaurants proudly announced "OVER 100 MILLION SERVED", then "200", then "300", etc., using numerals formed by a matrix of light bulbs so they could update it easily. After 900 million, they changed the signs to read "OVER 1 BILLION SERVED" with the "1" on a plastic sheet that could be swapped out when the next billion came along.

Finally they went Carl Sagan style: "BILLIONS AND BILLIONS SERVED".
 
  • #219
Ivan Seeking said:
Leaded fuels: To this day, I still tell the pump attendent to "fill it with regular unleaded".

You still have pump attendants?! I remember those!
 
  • #220
I remember:

- my dad's first cell phone with pull out antenna and maximum 15 minutes of talk time battery life. He used to have two batteries (with a cool double battery holder/charger) so that he could swap out if he needed to make an urgent call.

- playing games on a "computer" where you had to put a tape into, what looked like a cassette player, it would make some squealing noises and then you'd be ready to go.

- I remember my dad giving me his old 486 DX4-100. That thing was the bomb. I think I used to play Frogger and SimCity and maybe Doom on that. All the games were either on floppy (5 1/4") an later on stiffy.

- I remember playing Leisure Suit Larry 1 on a PC which had a couple hundred kB of RAM and a green and black screen. Oh and "black cauldron" a typing adventure game with little blocky graphics... go left... open door... pickup ring :)
 
  • #221
I remember when cartoons were for children.
 
  • #222
brewnog said:
You still have pump attendants?! I remember those!

I heard they were trying to change it but in Oregon you must be served by a pump attendant by law. I've even heard that they will practically pounce on you if you so much as get out of your car.
 
  • #223
Alfi said:
I remember when cartoons were for children.

I remember learning that they were originally for adults (see: Betty Boop, Flinstones smoking and drinking beer, ect). ;-)
 
  • #224
I remember when the "star" and "pound" buttons on touch-tone phones had no practical use other than instantly causing a busy signal.
 
  • #225
Chi Meson said:
I remember when the "star" and "pound" buttons on touch-tone phones had no practical use other than instantly causing a busy signal.

I don't remember what the star and pound did on rotary phones!
 
  • #226
I remember:

Seeing "Pong" in airports, then a few years later Space Invaders was all the rage.

Washing dishes by hand. Not only did my parents never get a dishwasher, they actually had one removed when our family moved to a new house. Grumble grumble.

And rotary phones, yes my parents kept theirs until just a few years ago. They would switch to a pushbutton phone over my father's dead body, which is what it took to get one of them installed in their house.

And black-and-white televisions ... I was ecstatic when my parents relented and finally made the switch to color, but we were the last ones in our neighborhood to do it.

EDIT:
(This came up in another recent thread.) Programming with punch cards.
 
  • #227
Remember when Barney would pick up the phone in the Mayberry sheriff's office and tell the operator "Get me the diner."? We had to crank a magneto to get the attention of the operator, and give her the telephone number, knowing full well that she would eavesdrop on any call she could. Finally, when I came home on break from my freshman year in college, we had an actual dial telephone instead of that wall-mounted dinosaur. That was in 1970.
 
  • #228
TheStatutoryApe said:
I heard they were trying to change it but in Oregon you must be served by a pump attendant by law. I've even heard that they will practically pounce on you if you so much as get out of your car.

NJ still has that antiquated law too. Somehow they reason that the fumes from pumping gas are too hazardous for the average person to be exposed to, so it's much better to expose some high school dropout to the fumes all day, every day, as they pump gas for everyone. (Though, that also brings to mind the common threat made to high school students if they didn't keep their grades up..."Do you want to end up pumping gas for a living?")

It makes me glad to live in another state. When I visit, if the attendant is too slow, as they usually are, all I need to do is hop out of the car and start opening the gas cap to get them to rush over and pump gas for me (or I just start doing it myself and when they protest, I plead ignorance with my WV plates).
 
  • #229
When walkmans and cd players used to rule...
 
  • #230
Moonbear said:
NJ still has that antiquated law too. Somehow they reason that the fumes from pumping gas are too hazardous for the average person to be exposed to, so it's much better to expose some high school dropout to the fumes all day, every day, as they pump gas for everyone. (Though, that also brings to mind the common threat made to high school students if they didn't keep their grades up..."Do you want to end up pumping gas for a living?")

It makes me glad to live in another state. When I visit, if the attendant is too slow, as they usually are, all I need to do is hop out of the car and start opening the gas cap to get them to rush over and pump gas for me (or I just start doing it myself and when they protest, I plead ignorance with my WV plates).
I thought is was because they were afraid we would blow ourselves up by smoking while fueling. That's why gas stations in the PDRNSJ have to be at least 1000 feet away from any road.
 
  • #231
TheStatutoryApe said:
I remember learning that they were originally for adults (see: Betty Boop, Flinstones smoking and drinking beer, ect). ;-)

Oh my goodness yes! At a recent arts festival downtown, the public library was showing old cartoons and encouraged parents to take their children -- while the "Gumby" one they were showing when we first walked in was certainly fun... we had to get the boys outta there when "Betty Boop" appeared! The things she was doing to the pen that just drew her!

Oy! I thought since it was the public library they would be careful about what was shown...
 
  • #232
Like Jessica said, "I'm not bad, I'm just drawn that way."
 
  • #233
I remember using "mucilage" adhesive.

79.jpg
 
  • #234
Math Is Hard said:
I remember using "mucilage" adhesive.
Is that in reply to physics girl's adult cartoon post?
 
  • #235
physics girl phd said:
we had to get the boys outta there when "Betty Boop" appeared! The things she was doing to the pen that just drew her!

You certainly have piqued my curiosity about which Betty Boop episode was shown!
 
  • #236
brewnog said:
You still have pump attendants?! I remember those!

Yep. And as TSA pointed out, they get pretty worked up if you try to pump your own. On my first visit to Oregon, when I stopped for gas and started to pump it myself, the attendent came running across the parking lot yelling at me! At first I couldn't figure what in the world this guy was getting so upset about! :rolleyes:

The reason for the law is that many people need the jobs.
 
  • #237
The first job I got after getting my Ph.D. was pumping gas in a gas station!
 
  • #238
HallsofIvy said:
The first job I got after getting my Ph.D. was pumping gas in a gas station!

YIKES! That had to be hard to take.
 
  • #239
Math Is Hard said:
I remember using "mucilage" adhesive.

79.jpg
Oooh, yes, I used mucilage a lot!
 
  • #240
Ivan Seeking said:
YIKES! That had to be hard to take.
Not really - they probably had on the job training:wink:
 

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