Shaw S Hunter
Established Member
Seems relatively common in Italy. Results in much finger pointing by non-Italian speakers.Sounds like my experience trying to buy a sandwich in Pisa Airport.
Seems relatively common in Italy. Results in much finger pointing by non-Italian speakers.Sounds like my experience trying to buy a sandwich in Pisa Airport.
Having worked in schools and now working in science I was amused when an inquisitive teacher discovered that quite modern heat mats were also asbestos containing! This made the news and we had the university ones checked, and ours were asbestos too.Asbestos mats in the school science labs.
You could 'dial' much more quickly if you tapped out the number on the handset support...Rotary dial telephones - having to wait for the mechanical dial to return to the original position for every digit of the phone number. A really tedious process if you needed to dial a number with the area code, even more so if you made a mistake and had to start again.![]()
This also bypassed the dial lock fitted by a parent to prevent overenthusiastic use of the phone by the offspring.You could 'dial' much more quickly if you tapped out the number on the handset support...
Well I wouldn’t know what to do with an X box so I suppose it’s swings and roundabouts.I can't find it now, but I have seen a video where several teenagers have to use a rotary phone to ring a number in order to be let out of the test room. It was about an hour long....
Saturday evening papers with the football results.
On the previous subject of the test card, there was a method to get a hidden testcard to appear on some Freeview TVs and set top boxes by pressing a certain sequence of buttons on the remote control, can’t remember the sequence offhand nor if this method still works.
Is AM9 part of your post code?Eeee! that sounds like 'Capstick Come Home'.
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Snap! I also mix in a few memorable postcodes, - useful for login passwords that insist on numbers/letters/caps and 'special chracters.
My grandmother's was BATtersea 6197, which was translated, somewhat naturally, into 228 6197. (B = 2, A = 2, T = 8)Four digit telephone numbers. Poole 3801 my first shared house after uni.
If you think that blu-rays, or DVD box sets, have died out you should check out the Blu-ray.com website, or the appropriate section of Amazon or even visit an HMV store.90s baby here but a number of things have already died out:
Dvd Box Sets
Blu-Ray
"And tonight a double-bill"
Telextext
Being excited in general as a child to find a hotel room has a TV
Areas in London being "rough"
Apple being a weird and niche brand of computers
Celebrity Culture in general
Telling your friend to wait by the phone at X time so they're parents don't answer when you call
Greasy spoons/sandwich bares being more common
Graffiti on trains (now unfortunately coming back)
I've just been playing a couple of 8 inch 78s.. one on Edison Bell Radio label and the other on Broadcast. These little records were popular in the late 1920s and early 30s.78 r.p.m. records. The first LPs went on sale in Britain in 1950. Or even 80 r.p.m., records which Columbia (The Columbia Graphophone Company) were issuing between the World Wars, and which, if you had a gramophone, you might well still be playing later. Many popular songs (not to be confused with "pop" songs) were composed so as to fit on one side of either a ten-inch or twelve-inch record.
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And Betamax tapes. Also the various incarnations of the videotape system developed by Philips and Grundig.
The Video+ numbers used an algorithm to encode date, time, channel number, and programme length. So if two programmes had exactly the same details (and I think it would have to be yearly rather than 6 months) then it would have the same number.What about the 'Video +' numbers published in newspapers which simpliied recording of tv programmes on your VHS player. I never understood how these numbers were chosen - and sometimes they were re-used every 6 months or so.
They went relatively recently compared to most other things in this thread, late 00s I think.Saturday evening papers with the football results.
If you think that blu-rays, or DVD box sets, have died out you should check out the Blu-ray.com website, or the appropriate section of Amazon or even visit an HMV store.
Certainly have gone out of common usage. I brought a Blu-Ray recently to make a point of buying one. But had I not done so I would have watched what I wanted to see on streaming. Whether that's a better form of media consumption is another question.
Four digit telephone numbers. Poole 3801 my first shared house after uni.
Poynton 3161 until 1976
When I was a teenager in Scotland in the early 1970s, the telephone number for Kyle of Lochalsh station was Kyle 2. (Not surprisingly, Kyle 1 was the post office!). Living in a slightly larger settlement, our home phone number at this time was Rhu 512.When I was a child in the 1950’s the telephone number for Joules Brewery in Stone Staffordshire was Stone 1 (one)
Still happens up here... unofficially, of course.Lunchtime drinking then going back to work!
Not much further down the road from Rhu 512 I was at Helensburgh 1404.When I was a teenager in Scotland in the early 1970s, the telephone number for Kyle of Lochalsh station was Kyle 2. (Not surprisingly, Kyle 1 was the post office!). Living in a slightly larger settlement, our home phone number at this time was Rhu 512.
This is most unusual and exceptional. “One” was reserved for telephone services such as the operator, 100 etc. The first numbers allocated to subscribers were 2 something. I’d love to find out more about this.When I was a child in the 1950’s the telephone number for Joules Brewery in Stone Staffordshire was Stone 1 (one)
No, it's the original class designation of what was the best EMU on BR in the '60s, i.e. the Clacton Electrics class 309. My current postcode is part of AL (St Albans).Is AM9 part of your post code?![]()
Or indeed consult the one in the nearest phone box!Or you could phone Directory Enquiries or plunder the huge collection of phone directories at your local public library.
When I first lived in (West) Germany in the late 1980s, getting money out of a bank (even a small suburban branch) required you to visit 3 separate counters. One was to do the paperwork and the final one was the cashier who actually had the money. I can’t for the life of me remember what the third one was. ATMs (completely normal in the UK by then) had yet to make their presence feltFoyles bookshop in London in the 1980s had an owner who didn’t trust counter staff to handle money, so she inflicted three queues on each customer purchase:
I think it was only on the owner’s death that a more normal method of payment was introduced. Why Foyles didn’t go bust because of the system, I don’t know - perhaps because it held better stock of books than its obvious competitor (Dillons), indeed Dillons eventually went bust and was taken over, in the end by Waterstone’s I believe.
- Queue with the books you want to buy, to hand them over to counter staff and be given a paper invoice in return
- Queue with the invoice at a special cash desk (of which there were not many) to pay, and to be given back a suitable marked invoice denoting that payment has been made
- Queue at the counter again before exchanging the marked invoice for the books you previously saw a while ago
Curled and slightly faded (or even black and white) having been sitting in the display rack since bought in bulk in 1960-something!Not by any means extinct but a couple of things which are in gradual decline:
Traditional picture postcards especially those featuring localities which are unlikely to be any longer on many bucket lists. Silloth might be such a case.
I remember the foot _-rays that were in many shoue shops, including where parents took their children to get well fitting shoes. All of a sudden all the X-rays viewers disappeared, probably when somebody realised that uncontrolled exposure to X-rays was not good for anybody, let alone young developing children!I well remember those. There were at least two old established shops in Reading which had these, one was a shoe shop (which also had an X-ray machine to see how well a pair of shoes fitted one's feet!) and the other was Jacksons department store. Although Jacksons used a vacuum tube system the concept was exactly the same.
Presumably that stopped with the advent of direct dialling as the 60s progressed.Having to book a long distance phone call ahead of time and await the operator phoning you back to tell you your call is ready.
pre-automation numbers started at 1, although occasionally using 0 for fire services etc, and just carried on. Brown’s of Chester rejoiced in Chester 1 and had the Telegraphic Address of “Progress, Chester.”This is most unusual and exceptional. “One” was reserved for telephone services such as the operator, 100 etc. The first numbers allocated to subscribers were 2 something. I’d love to find out more about this.
Incidentally with rotary phones, adding additional digits at the end of a number didn’t matter, they were ignored, and I understand “99” would have got you through to the emergency services operator if you’d tried it.
To my surprise, operator intervention survived in the US way beyond the full roll-out of STD calling in the UK. In 1990, I was away on business in Chicago when having had a weekend 'road trip; realised that we would be late arriving back in the small hours of Monday morning so decided to alert our host to let him know that we might present for work later than normal that morning. We had to speak to the local operator, (I think it was Louiville Ky.), who chwecked the coins imnto the box, and then dialled the number. We only had cash for about 90 seconds, but when the call was answered, the recorded message from our hot droned on for over a minute with various alternative contact detailes, and we only had a few seconds to tell him that we might be late.Having to book a long distance phone call ahead of time and await the operator phoning you back to tell you your call is ready.