Todays Hi-Tech Video
Jun. 11th, 2011 11:57 amWhen I was a wee child, we still had a phone without a dial. When you picked up the receiver, a pleasant woman asked, "Number, please." Then, we got a phone with a funny wheel on the front: a dial! We were intrigued by it, and perhaps a bit unsure of how it worked. The video embedded here was the Bell System's way of informing people how to use those newfangled dial phones. The one we got in our house was identical to the one shown in the video. The Bell System owned the phone and you leased it from them. That way, the phone company could ensure that no substandard equipment was connected to its lines, and the consumer was assured that if something went wrong, one of Ma Bell's many children would drop by the house and swap it out for a functional phone.
For some reason the video stopped being embedded...I can't tell why. So here's the link to the page on which I found it.
Today, dial phones are almost a thing of the past. I have not seen one in use for around 20 years. When the Touch-Tone phone first came out, you had to pay extra to use it. Now everyone owns their own phone, called the landline nowadays. They all have buttons, or in the case of many mobile phones like my iPhone, virtual buttons. We have thus come full circle: most people under the age of 30 or so have never used, or even seen, a dial phone in the Bakelite…um…flesh. And "Number, please"? I am probably one of the youngest people ever to have had a non-dial, non-button phone.
Nowadays, some phones will dial a number for you if you simply speak it into the mouthpiece. In the 1950's, I could do the same. As the Scriptures say, there is nothing new under the sun.
For some reason the video stopped being embedded...I can't tell why. So here's the link to the page on which I found it.
Today, dial phones are almost a thing of the past. I have not seen one in use for around 20 years. When the Touch-Tone phone first came out, you had to pay extra to use it. Now everyone owns their own phone, called the landline nowadays. They all have buttons, or in the case of many mobile phones like my iPhone, virtual buttons. We have thus come full circle: most people under the age of 30 or so have never used, or even seen, a dial phone in the Bakelite…um…flesh. And "Number, please"? I am probably one of the youngest people ever to have had a non-dial, non-button phone.
Nowadays, some phones will dial a number for you if you simply speak it into the mouthpiece. In the 1950's, I could do the same. As the Scriptures say, there is nothing new under the sun.
no subject
Date: 2011-06-11 11:23 am (UTC)Our number was NEptune 1-4393. My grandmother's number was NEptune 1-0002 as her husband (my step-grandfather) had gotten the second phone in town after the bank. He was a railroad engineer and needed the phone in case the railroad wanted him to come in to work. This would have been around 100 years ago.
no subject
Date: 2011-06-11 02:46 pm (UTC)My mother called her mother nearly every day, and they talked for an hour or more. What more reason would one need to have a phone than to talk to one's mother?
no subject
Date: 2011-06-11 05:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-06-11 02:53 pm (UTC)Not too long ago before Richard's dance teacher passes away, she had a rotary dial phone in her office in the studio. When the younger girls(aged 5-8ish) need to call their moms for rides home, she would tell them to use her office phone. Richard said you should have seen their faces coming out of the office so confused and Richard would go in and show them how to dial and keep their finger in the hole and not let go!!!
no subject
Date: 2011-06-12 06:44 am (UTC)But from the two comments I've gotten I may post a more general entry about our childhood phone numbers.
no subject
Date: 2011-06-12 09:15 pm (UTC)TYler 2 1899
Date: 2011-06-12 12:08 am (UTC)i also figured out international direct dial quickly ... and started to dial random numbers to try to talk to people (this was before i understood that not everyone spoke english ... the french people on tv all spoke english, just with funny accents!) that didn't go over well ...
Re: TYler 2 1899
Date: 2011-06-12 06:42 am (UTC)My whole family believes that international calls are so expensive that they cannot bear to make one unless there is a death in the family. My dad never mastered the knack of making an international call. As his father was born in Scotland, that might explain it.
PEnnsylvania 6-5000!
Date: 2011-06-12 09:07 pm (UTC)The Battersea Dogs Home's phone number was BATtersea 8236. We got some interesting wrong numbers, people desperate to know if Fido had been found. But (even today) phone numbers in the UK do not have a standard length. My sister's phone number in Preston, Lancs is six digits long, not seven; but when she was first married (and living in a rather small village), her phone number was WILstead 437.
I lived in London, so it was (marginally) more techno-advanced than Marblehead MA, so even though I'm more-or-less
Re: PEnnsylvania 6-5000!
Date: 2011-06-12 09:44 pm (UTC)Some people would KILL nowadays to pick up the phone and actually talk to a real live person. We were ahead of our times in Marblehead.