Lloyds siding
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We used to have a gas fridge...
Although an OHP is something completely different.Ah yes, death by OH (Overhead Projector) slides, The forerunner to death by Power Point.
OHP slides were the true predecessor of Power Point presentations on digital projectors. I remember many lectures where handwritten slides were shown, - and even annotated/modified by felt tip pens during the lecture.Although an OHP is something completely different.
Depends on the size of the office location - the last thing you need is everyone ordering their own stationery and expensing it... Far better to run a tightly controlled core list.In fact, in most cost-conscious companies in the 21st century, there won't even be a stationery cupboard.
That’s reminded me, school logarithm & anti-logarithm tables……. plus all the other trigonometric tables.…And, if you happened to work in a scientific function, its more exotic cousins - pads of log-linear and log-log graph paper..
Vick’s Vapour Rub in my case, it was even possible to get a plastic tall thin bowl for it, all from memory.Is inhaling the fumes from Friars Balsam from a bowl whilst you have a towel over your head and surrounding the bowl still a thing? Younger readers may be blissfully unaware of the concept. There was a specific name for this type of activity which escapes me for the moment.
That reminds me of one of the Dilbert comic strips . . .
Pointy-haired boss: "The Management have been doing a review. We've concluded Our People are not actually the company's most valuable resource. In fact, they're number eight."
Dilbert: "Just out of interest, what was number seven?"
Boss (consults piece of paper): "Carbon paper."
Something else you no longer find in the office stationery cupboard - pads of pale blue printed graph paper.
And, if you happened to work in a scientific function, its more exotic cousins - pads of log-linear and log-log graph paper*.
In fact, in most cost-conscious companies in the 21st century, there won't even be a stationery cupboard.
* - nowadays, if you really want to draw a plot with pencil & ruler rather than use graphing software on a screen, you can download pdfs and print sheets of blank graph paper from the internet. And for the real sticklers for scientific tradition with a generous boss, Amazon still sells the old-fashioned pads, at a price.
I had an IBM engineer once send me an electronic spreadsheet in which he had a column of numbers followed by a sum total, and he’d worked out the sum himself and entered it in the appropriate box. I don’t think he quite got the idea!Perhaps tangentially, regarding using the traditional pencil and paper...
When I worked at 222 one of my colleagues was not perhaps as ready to grasp the advantages of developing technology as the rest of us, and stuck to producing documents on squared paper using a pencil. We suggested that a simple spreadsheet would really make things easier, and showed him how to do it.
The result? He set up a spreadsheet but entered no values. He then printed it out (managing to show the grid-lines) and then....
filled in the boxes by hand in pencil.
At privatisation a certain control office was still producing hand-written train running records for its InterCity services. But, instead of phone calls to get times, controllers looked them up on a TOPS screen!Perhaps tangentially, regarding using the traditional pencil and paper...
When I worked at 222 one of my colleagues was not perhaps as ready to grasp the advantages of developing technology as the rest of us, and stuck to producing documents on squared paper using a pencil. We suggested that a simple spreadsheet would really make things easier, and showed him how to do it.
The result? He set up a spreadsheet but entered no values. He then printed it out (managing to show the grid-lines) and then....
filled in the boxes by hand in pencil.
In similar anachronistic vein: Premium Bonds - bought by favourite aunts & uncles, or happy grandparents on the occasion of one of a child's life milestones. Christening - confirmation - passing the 11+ and that sort of thing.
I was mildly surprised to see Premium Bonds are still "a thing". All online now, of course, but still seeming operating according to the original 1950s model, with HM government holding nearly half a billion quid of these funds.
This reminded me I probably have a few (literally) Premium Bonds floating around somewhere from five or six decades ago. If I can ever find the numbers and cash them in, the principal might just about pay for a couple of bus fares or a cup of coffee - unless I happen to have won one or more of the big prizes (up to £1million) over the intervening years.
Nowadays, Premium Bonds seem to be mainly used as a tax-free savings vehicle for the wealthy. If you look at the list of winners, many are holding the maximum amount of £50000.
You might all be surprised! You can download the table of prizes >£1000 any month and sort it, I did one recently and got the following, showing that some very small old bonds have given an exceptional return. I have lost the headings, but the last column is (obviously) when bought, the next one the number bought at that time and the 4th in (from either end!) is the total holdingSame here. We have some bonds bought by an aunt in the early 70s through the mid 80s - which have won exactly nothing.
£1,000 | AS442865 | | £1 | Durham | £1 | Mar-57 |
£1,000 | 5DK646796 | | £1 | Gwent Valleys | £1 | Feb-71 |
£1,000 | 1CL935205 | | £3 | Surrey | £3 | Oct-66 |
£1,000 | 4FB525750 | | £5 | Nottingham | £5 | Aug-71 |
£1,000 | 12EL848241 | | £10 | Bromley | £5 | Jan-85 |
£1,000 | 11KN290458 | | £10 | Outer London | £10 | Jan-78 |
£1,000 | 1AS555850 | | £14 | Essex | £1 | Oct-59 |
£5,000 | 6KL622968 | | £15 | Overseas | £10 | Sep-70 |
£1,000 | 4GB649516 | | £20 | Cambridgeshire | £20 | Mar-92 |
£1,000 | 20KF209024 | | £20 | Kirklees | £10 | Sep-85 |
£1,000 | 3GL314630 | | £20 | Northumberland | £20 | Feb-88 |
£10,000 | 6FL352412 | | £21 | Kent | £5 | Jun-75 |
£1,000 | 1CB719333 | | £22 | Cardiff | £3 | Jul-65 |
£50,000 | 5LN702767 | | £22 | Humberside | £20 | Feb-70 |
except that a) the "evidence" about salt is open to question and lots of medics/researchers can't justify it, and b) you are now told officially to eat a balanced diet including all types of fat. The demonisation of animal fat was never justified and has imposed all sorts of costs on society.With salt on them. For added unhealthy eating.
£1,000 | AS442865 | | £1 | Durham | £1 | Mar-57 |
£1,000 | 5DK646796 | | £1 | Gwent Valleys | £1 | Feb-71 |
£1,000 | 1CL935205 | | £3 | Surrey | £3 | Oct-66 |
£1,000 | 4FB525750 | | £5 | Nottingham | £5 | Aug-71 |
£1,000 | 12EL848241 | | £10 | Bromley | £5 | Jan-85 |
£1,000 | 11KN290458 | | £10 | Outer London | £10 | Jan-78 |
£1,000 | 1AS555850 | | £14 | Essex | £1 | Oct-59 |
£5,000 | 6KL622968 | | £15 | Overseas | £10 | Sep-70 |
£1,000 | 4GB649516 | | £20 | Cambridgeshire | £20 | Mar-92 |
£1,000 | 20KF209024 | | £20 | Kirklees | £10 | Sep-85 |
£1,000 | 3GL314630 | | £20 | Northumberland | £20 | Feb-88 |
£10,000 | 6FL352412 | | £21 | Kent | £5 | Jun-75 |
£1,000 | 1CB719333 | | £22 | Cardiff | £3 | Jul-65 |
£50,000 | 5LN702767 | | £22 | Humberside | £20 | Feb-70 |
Not yet. I checked them last year and we had won nothing.You might all be surprised!
that's the sort of luck I have too, but it doesn't alter the fact that some tiny holdings do get worthwhile prizes each month.Not yet. I checked them last year and we had won nothing.
What about those top rounded tubes you stuck up your nose? Think that was a Vick's product.Vick’s Vapour Rub in my case, it was even possible to get a plastic tall thin bowl for it, all from memory.
EDIT Apparently VapoRub: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicks_VapoRub
I still use them!What about those top rounded tubes you stuck up your nose? Think that was a Vick's product.
Its one of my favourite movies. The soundtrack is great, but the cost of clearing that meant it never made it to DVD. However it is on Youtube. This bit shows Kecks's trousers:And still in colourful rogue mode - the 1987 BBC TV film Coast to Coast featured the character of Kecks McGuinness, a dodgy BR buffet car attendant based in Liverpool. 'Kecks' is scouse slang for trousers and he reportedly got the nickname for always wearing his BR-issue uniform trousers.
This link has a few rail-related stills from the first episode, but unfortunately no photographic record of Kecks' red-stripe BR pants.
It also shows the bit where a London gangster and his enforcer The Chiropodist supposedly arrive into Lime Street in pursuit of Kecks - on a train hauled by a Peak! Tut tut.
Going back to the 1970’s/1980’s when Rugeley had two power stations and a coal mine (plus others nearby), it was commonplace to see people walking around the town wearing Donkey Jackets with CEGB or NCB stencilled on the back. Also virtually everyone had a pair of overalls with same. It made no difference whether you worked at the power station or pit, someone who did would get them for you.When employers who issued uniforms to their employees….
If I remember correctly from my days with the Bullingdon Club, a black satin stripe is de rigueur for the black dress trousers (a.k.a. tuxedo trousers) which accompany dinner jacket / black tie attire. Next level compared to the red stripe on the bus crew or Travellers Fare issue pants.There was someone, who I knew, worked for the property side of British Rail and was known for his dress. He turned up, wearing trousers with a stripe down the side, which were part of formal wear.
What are they called?I still use them!