fureverywhere
beloved friend who will always be with us in spiri
- Location
- Northern NJ, USA
Probably one of the biggest changes that dates us is remembering what telephones used to be. I was on another site talking about the movie " Wall Street". That came out in 1987. There's a scene where Gordon Gecko is strolling on the beach with his cordless phone. His character is wealthy, so the phone was probably state of the art for that era. The phone was almost bread loaf sized.
Do you remember Princess Phones? Phone numbers that had letters? Party lines? My grandmother lived in small town Pennsylvania. You would pick up the phone, greet the operator and tell her who you wanted to talk to. If you were expecting an important call you had to stay near the phone, you couldn't pick it up and take it with you. Even into the 70's not many people had answering machines.
We take our cell phones for granted now. They record calls, take pictures, connect to the internet, text, do everything except fly...wait there's an app for that...would you have believed it in 1972?
Do you remember Princess Phones? Phone numbers that had letters? Party lines? My grandmother lived in small town Pennsylvania. You would pick up the phone, greet the operator and tell her who you wanted to talk to. If you were expecting an important call you had to stay near the phone, you couldn't pick it up and take it with you. Even into the 70's not many people had answering machines.
We take our cell phones for granted now. They record calls, take pictures, connect to the internet, text, do everything except fly...wait there's an app for that...would you have believed it in 1972?