I miss having an old rotary phone if for no other reason than when you are angry you can SLAM down the head piece. Now a days all you can do is throw the cordless. The problem with that is if you are mad your aim is going to be off.
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. LizzieMaine said:There were also plenty of cases of people using phones as a weapon -- using them to club a burglar over the head, for instance. What would you do today, use your smart-phone to defriend them on Facebook?
There were also plenty of cases of people using phones as a weapon -- using them to club a burglar over the head, for instance. What would you do today, use your smart-phone to defriend them on Facebook?
As a kid I was always fascinated by the different colored buttons on those old cash registers. Years later when I worked at an electronics surplus store we had one of those machines sitting in the back room which we used to play with. I should have offered to buy it even though it weighed a ton.
There were also plenty of cases of people using phones as a weapon -- using them to club a burglar over the head, for instance. What would you do today, use your smart-phone to defriend them on Facebook?
Another advantage of a rotary phone is after you knock your attacker out, you can tie them up with the cord. Triple use: defend yourself, call the police, and secure your assailant.
Another advantage of a rotary phone is after you knock your attacker out, you can tie them up with the cord. Triple use: defend yourself, call the police, and secure your assailant.
Tell that to poor old Al Roberts in Detour!
I remember listening to my grandfather's shortwave radio and hearing the metronome tock of the time service station, periodically punctuated by the voice from who-knows-where intoning, "universal coordinated time". Dial-up time service may be gone, but I think there are still a few shortwave time service stations out there.
WWV is the time station you are remembering and it's still there.
http://www.nist.gov/pml/div688/grp40/wwv.cfm
CHU is the Canadian equivalent and is also still in operation.
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I'd add to that the sounds of clip-clopping hooves and rumbling wagon wheels on cobblestones ... and the sound of a large ice block being slid into an icebox ... and the hum of a vacuum tube radio warming up.