I have witnessed some evolutions in my lifetime.
Take the telephone, for example. When I was a child, in the house in which I primarily grew up, we had a telephone attached to the wall in the kitchen. There was another one on my parents' bedside table, wired to the wall, and another in the upstairs hall with similar wiring between my brother's and my bedrooms.
Because the upstairs phone was near the door to my brother's room, he could easily take it into his room and act as if he had his own phone in his own room. But I was quick to remind him he did not. Alas, I could not stretch either the wire from the phone into the wall outlet or the phone cord of the receiver far enough to get it into my room. It annoyed me to no end that he had his "own phone." (And again, he didn't.)
These were telephones with rotary dials. Eventually there were the "touchtone" phones, which that house never had. When my dad died in 2006, the bedroom and upstairs rotary phones were still there. He had gotten a push-button phone in the kitchen, but it was still "pulse" and not touchtone, meaning even though it had the buttons, it still ran on a pulse system, however that worked. (My dad was anything but progressive, by the way. I am sure he decided it cost too much to upgrade to touchtone.)
I even remember when there was only one telephone company, some version of "Bell," depending on where you lived. And I believe that was, at the time, all part of AT&T. I'm way oversimplifying, but as I recall, the Justice Department broke up the conglomerate phone company via an antitrust lawsuit, which gave way to the various phone companies.
That was plenty to transpire. But who in their wildest dreams would or could have predicted what eventually happened -- that those phones attached to walls would become obsolete? And that many of us would hold in our hands a telephone that is also a camera, a GPS and a personal computer (among many other things)?
What I keep waiting for is for the "home phone" or landline to come back into vogue the way vinyl records have. We went from records to eight-track to cassette to digital to . . . what's that? Vinyl? Yep. Full circle. Many musical purists believe vinyl is, well, the purest way to listen to music again.
And old stereo systems, once pieces of furniture with a turntable and built-in speakers, restored to their original woodgrain and with perhaps some tweaking to those speakers? Those are now collectors' items.
So, if you have an old wall or desk telephone laying around awaiting disposal, wait a few years to see if it will also return to fashionableness as a retro must-have. You might already be ahead of your time.
8 comments:
You had it easy Bob. The houses I grew up in only had a single phone attached to the wall so all calls were made and listened to by parents from it. To make it worse, we had party lines until I left for college so up to five of my neighbors could listen in too. Sometime after I went to college, they finally "modernized" them so that we had our own individual phone that wasn't shared with all the neighbors but to my knowledge, it was always pulse tone service and cellphones came along before touchtone phones were allowed in our area.
Our local history museum has a display with a wall hung rotary dial phone and I always get amused listening to the young kids pondering what kind of device it might be.
I still have my home phones in my house, even tho I now use my cell phone more and more. I feel that I know where my home phones are and I don't always know where I set my cell phone down. In case of an emergency, if I can't find my cell phone or I forgot to charge it, I can crawl to my home phone to call for help. :)
Just yesterday I mentioned something about newspapers and how excited I used to be to get the Saturday morning paper so I could check the high school football scores from the night before.
Yep. Stereos. Phones. CD's. Cassettes. VHS. Pagers. Do you remember 8-tracks? My parents even had a CB radio in the car when I was little.
Heck, even books are seemingly on the way out. I still read them, but my wife reads everything on her Kindle. Somehow, we have managed to make it work.
Your post made me think of this:
https://youtu.be/yHI-3iuOezw?si=KhY3BWUNwnyb2IJF
I still have a couple of "fun" telephones stashed on the back of a closet shelf. I'm not sure I think they'll ever come back into vogue.
I have an old crank telephone hanging in our front hall. I have two rotary dial phones upstairs. It took forever to get the courage up to do away with the landline. I do find myself wondering, with all this hacking stuff, if there might not come the day when landlines rule once again.
PS: I loved your piece on the Electoral College.
We still have a landine, but more interesting than that, we keep a push-button phone plugged into a phone jack. There are times we lose power, but the phone line is still working.
I kind of regret we didn't bring home Hub's parents' 1960-something stereo cabinet after his mom passed. We didn't have room for it in our old house, but it would look very cool here. We have a turntable and speakers we sometimes play vinyl records on.
I enjoyed your electoral college piece too. I tried to comment, but evidently wasn't logged in, and nowhere near my password.
Thanks, Becki! I have had other readers comment that Substack is not always user friendly. But thank you for reading!
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