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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Your first phone?

Your first phone?

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  • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

    I really meant first cell phone. Of course we all had the Western Electric model 500. The phone company issued them to us our parents. We didn’t even own them back then.

    AxtremusA Offline
    AxtremusA Offline
    Axtremus
    wrote last edited by
    #19

    @jon-nyc said:
    The phone company issued them to us our parents. We didn’t even own them back then.

    My parents owned rotary phones, but I owned wall-mounted touchstone phones myself. I was already living on my own at the time, so I owned the wall-mounted phones, not my parents. I also owned DECT phones, "cordless" yet "not wireless."

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    • jon-nycJ Offline
      jon-nycJ Offline
      jon-nyc
      wrote last edited by
      #20

      Here they didn't allow you to own your own rotary phones until the 80s for most people, though in some areas you could do it in the late 70s. For decades ma bell wouldn't allow devices they didn't own to be connected. You were forced to rent them.

      Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.

      Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
      • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

        Here they didn't allow you to own your own rotary phones until the 80s for most people, though in some areas you could do it in the late 70s. For decades ma bell wouldn't allow devices they didn't own to be connected. You were forced to rent them.

        Doctor PhibesD Offline
        Doctor PhibesD Offline
        Doctor Phibes
        wrote last edited by
        #21

        @jon-nyc said:

        Here they didn't allow you to own your own rotary phones until the 80s for most people, though in some areas you could do it in the late 70s. For decades ma bell wouldn't allow devices they didn't own to be connected. You were forced to rent them.

        It was the same in the UK. You had to rent them from the Post Office who ran the service until it was privatised in the 1980s. We had a party line - shared with a neighbour

        I was only joking

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        • jon-nycJ Offline
          jon-nycJ Offline
          jon-nyc
          wrote last edited by
          #22

          Well yeah you lived in a 3rd world country.

          Actually we had party lines but they were mostly gone by the 60s.

          Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.

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          • taiwan_girlT Offline
            taiwan_girlT Offline
            taiwan_girl
            wrote last edited by
            #23

            I remember the blackberry. Used to play brick breaker (or whatever it was called) a lot. LOL. Thought it was the coolest thing to get email on the phone.

            (now I realize maybe that was not such a good thing. LOL)

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            • jon-nycJ Offline
              jon-nycJ Offline
              jon-nyc
              wrote last edited by
              #24

              The original version was just for email. The first time o saw one was in 1999 at Nasdaq. Their CIO carried one. He was always testing new technologies. I remember they had a pilot project where they sent stock quotes over TV signals using the channel designed to carry closed caption information.

              Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.

              AxtremusA Doctor PhibesD 2 Replies Last reply
              • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                The original version was just for email. The first time o saw one was in 1999 at Nasdaq. Their CIO carried one. He was always testing new technologies. I remember they had a pilot project where they sent stock quotes over TV signals using the channel designed to carry closed caption information.

                AxtremusA Offline
                AxtremusA Offline
                Axtremus
                wrote last edited by
                #25

                @jon-nyc said:

                I remember they had a pilot project where they sent stock quotes over TV signals using the channel designed to carry closed caption information.

                Teletext?

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                • jon-nycJ Offline
                  jon-nycJ Offline
                  jon-nyc
                  wrote last edited by
                  #26

                  Yes.

                  Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.

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                  • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                    The original version was just for email. The first time o saw one was in 1999 at Nasdaq. Their CIO carried one. He was always testing new technologies. I remember they had a pilot project where they sent stock quotes over TV signals using the channel designed to carry closed caption information.

                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor Phibes
                    wrote last edited by Doctor Phibes
                    #27

                    @jon-nyc said:

                    The original version was just for email. The first time o saw one was in 1999 at Nasdaq. Their CIO carried one. He was always testing new technologies. I remember they had a pilot project where they sent stock quotes over TV signals using the channel designed to carry closed caption information.

                    Yeah, so we had that in the UK in the 1970's, it was called Ceefax. But you shit-hole country colonial types took a while to catch up.

                    I was only joking

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                    • jon-nycJ Offline
                      jon-nycJ Offline
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote last edited by
                      #28

                      Ceefax because ‘minitel’ was taken.

                      BlackBerry integrated with corporate email systems it wasn’t just a standalone system.

                      Person. Woman. Man. Camera. TV.

                      1 Reply Last reply

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