Forgotten Electronics of the 70s and 80s 531
Ant writes "This is where you can find photos of those unusual items which somehow missed our keen attention in the 70s and 80s. Be it a specialty product, electronic novelty or an utter boondoggle from a major electronics outfit of the day, we'll dig 'em up and talk about 'em."
N-Gage (Score:5, Funny)
Re:N-Gage (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:N-Gage (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:N-Gage (Score:3, Insightful)
while it is just a series60 phone with the pad placed for better game playing, as such it's not bad actually(and tony hawk is not bad, while the other titles may suck). why they're limiting the games marketing just to n-gage I don't get though(if taken into consideration while programming, and provenly otherwise as well, the games will run fine for example on 6600 and on the rare occasion when 3650 has enough memory free on them as well). th
the calculator watch.. (Score:5, Funny)
especially if worn while carrying a boom box blasting old school Beastie Boys on your shoulder.
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:5, Funny)
Wow. I think you are the first person on /. to use the phrase "power chord" and not be talking about a wire that plugs into the wall! Your perspicacity is applauded and you may now advance to the next level. (???)
I still use this... (Score:3, Interesting)
The mighty Sharp GF-777. Shortwave radio, AM/FM, two cassette decks, an 'echo chamber' with mic jack and mixing. In short - the works! To this day, it still provides sound from my computer and it's connected to two nice Sony floor speakers.
Only the GF-888 was bigger - and I only ever saw two of these. One was on a beach entertaining pretty much the ENTIRE beach. It had TWO handles! I shudder to think how many 'D' cells it took to power it
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:2, Funny)
Just think of it! Those rascally teens can finally pleasure themselves without having to constantly glance over at the clock to see when mommy's coming home! You can attempt the world speed record without ever taking your eyes off the prize! You can even go for the Holy Grail of maximum times per day WITHOUT EVER LE
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:4, Funny)
Normal people call that the "Honeymoon".
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:2)
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Hello,
Was this a high school that you are referring to when you say that you could get expelled for having a calculator or even a middle school?
What was their reason for expelling a student with a portable machine that did arithmetic?
I'm curious because I wonder about the effect that new advanced technology has on deeply conservative societies and nobody is more conservative than an American public school administrator.
I wonder what will happen in places like Singapore, (which is deeply politically conservative, moderately conserative in education, and progressive in adoption of new electronic technologies) when the first spoken-Chinese to traditional character writers appear at low cost? Will students there attempt to refuse to spend ten years memorizing Chinese characters? Will the government ban them except for foreigners as being 'disruptive to society'? Or will they accept them a novelity and as just another electonic product to make and sell?
An even worse dilemma for Singapore will be the camera to speech convertors. This will be (in about 10 years as a guess) a hand-held device that 'speaks' the Chinese characters that the user has in the camera viewfinder.
With these machines will students refuse to spend ten years memorizing characters now that there would be a cheap machine that 'reads' the characters and speaks them?
Time will tell...
thank you,
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not the original poster, but I remember the days when you could get in trouble (maybe not expelled, but whatever) for having a calculator... or at least for using it in a math class.
It didn't much help me buckle down and do my long division homework when my mom said "it's ridiculous that they spend so much time making you do this... after all, everyone has calculat
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Who is the smart one again?
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because there's a hell of a difference between understanding what math is and how it works, and typing numbers into a machine to get an answer.
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Funny)
Am I the only one who first pronounced this in their head as ep-i-tome, only to later realize it was ep-i-to-me?
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Funny)
What seems to happen with me occasionally with certain words, I'll just misread it on the initial glance and suddenly I seem unable to actually 'see' the word.
Possibly the silliest example was whilst playing Scrabble with my younger brother, he was in a bad position and ended up putting down 'stone'.. my brain just couldn't read it for some odd reason, and I ended up demanding to know what the hell a 'stoh-nee' was.
He found this amusing, for some odd reason.
Yes, this is horribly off-topic for the main to
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:2)
I am waiting for the PDA watch version that is small enough for my thin wrists. The current ones are too thick and heavy for me to use.
Databank Watches... (Score:3, Informative)
Who here still wears one? I don't see any of my geeky friends use these types of watches anymore. I prefer them over PDAs.
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:4, Interesting)
A friend of mine had one that had a "game" on it; basically numbers would march across the screen and you'd have to match them on the calculator and type them in to "shoot" them down before they reached the left side of the display.
I begged my parents for one when I was a kid, and used to think about all the unbelievably fun things I would do with the calculator watch (?).
I finally got one, when they were cheap enough to be out of vogue. By that time it wasn't nearly as cool, and it broke in a few months anyway. I think by that time I had a digital watch that turned into a miniature Transformer.
Re:the calculator watch.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow, I remember the Transformer watches. A friend of mine had one, I seem to remember being very sorry for accidentally breaking it whilst trying to transform it.
Thinking back though, considering how cunning some of the Transformers were the watch one was hardly impressive. If I recall the head flipped out of the top of the watch, the two arms just pulled from the sides (They did include some of the cover though so weren't spindly little efforts, this was a real Man's Transformer watch), and the bottom o
ThinkGeek (Score:5, Funny)
Re:ThinkGeek (Score:3, Insightful)
Amongst those devices that I hope will be on the list of forgotten electronics of the 20's is the internet aware toaster.
If we're really lucky people will forget about that one before it happens, but I'm not holding my breath.
KFG
Re:ThinkGeek (Score:4, Funny)
Will the virus writers be able to set your house on fire I wonder?
Brings a new legitimacy to the term firewall. I guess without one you're toast?
My dad? (Score:5, Funny)
DVD
VHS
Beta
Record Player
CD Player
8 Track
It's all in 5.1 surround sound, so they all sound their best.
I just wonder if there's room for a player piano and a cannister recording device.
Re:My dad? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My dad? (Score:4, Informative)
5.1 is a gimmick designed to hide the fact that most people can't get a true positional stereo soundstage for the price they're willing to pay. Remember: at the end of the day, you only have 2 ears. All the positional audio you THINK you hear in a 5.1, 6.1 or 7.1 system is a result of you turning your head too much. Exceptions made, of course, for really big rooms with multiple viewing locations, in which multiple channels help create the illusion of a soundstage (but really, they end up creating distractions, as you're always way closer to one of the channels and everything's balanced for the guy in the center, anyway).
Anyhow, his setup isn't even really that impressive. Talk back to us when he gets the reel to reel, Super 8, laserdisc (which is actually an analog RF signal) and DAT hooked up.
Re:My dad? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My dad? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:My dad? (Score:2)
OH! I forgot to mention the cassette player too!
Re:My dad? (Score:2)
99% of DVDs do in fact carry 6 discrete channels of audio information. Any DVD recorded in DD or DTS 5.1 has these 6 channels.
Re:My dad? (Score:3, Informative)
Color Computer II (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Color Computer II (Score:2)
(The $1.25 is for a Diet Coke with Lime.)
Nostalgia (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nostalgia (Score:2, Funny)
Digital watch a step backwards (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyhow my father being very proud of his $800 new invention showed it to my grandfather, who looked very carefully at my fathers watch, he sat back, sipped his coffe and said "How is that progress when now it takes 2 hands to tell time, one for the watch and another to press the button to make it show time ?" My father kinda sank into his seat his bubble being burst instantly, I dont think he ever wore it again.
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:2)
I do remember seeing ads for those watches. I didn't realize you had to push a button to turn on the LEDs.
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:2)
-- Product of the early 1980s.
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:2)
--
In London? Need a Physics Tutor? [colingregorypalmer.net]
American Weblog in London [colingregorypalmer.net]
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:5, Interesting)
The family still owns a rather upscale jewlers store, my cousin a few years older than myself learned watchmaking from my great uncle (my grandfathers brother)
He is one of a VERY few watchmakers in the U.S. he specalizes in repairs on historical timepices. he now makes upward of $200k a year.
I thought the same thing most everyone else did, in this day and age how could a watchmaker compete in a world of mass manufacturing, the sad part is "Old World" craftmanship is dying, and its progressive, the fewer people even capable of this sort of work are able to teach fewer students.
Re:You idiot (Score:3, Interesting)
BESIDES I kinda have a phobia of things that tick, no joke, while I lived at my grandparent my room was the "watch room" all 4 walls were covered in although beautiflly crafted shelves FULL of clocks in need of repair, and litterally THOUSANDS of watches in drawers and boxes needing fixed.
NOW imagine waling into the room, the very act of walking created eno
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:3, Insightful)
I think on the whole with 'scrap parts' it'd probably be easier to build something to 'power your Casio' than to act as a reliable watchspring.. after all, the oscillation frequency of the timing crystal won't change.
On the other hand (Slight pun intended) it'd be easier to jury rig a cunning waterwheel mechanism to wind your existing spring-watch than charge your existing electronic gizmo.
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:4, Interesting)
Battery hog, too. Kept good time though. It still works, he let me use it for about a year when I was in college, and it was a good conversation starter. Not much good in direct sunlight, but that was never really a problem while I was an engineering student....
TI not the first (Score:3, Interesting)
Cheap digital watches drove the market for cheap (and much less accurate) clock crystals. It was all downhill from there.
Pulsar was a brand name used by Hamilton, one of the few and great American watch companies. They sold Pulsar as a brand name to some Asian consortium and the $17 Pulsar you find in W
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:4, Funny)
I feel relieved when someone like Bond looks at a large 4-digit LED display, the odds are it'll stop when it reaches 00:02, and the bomb will be defused and the world will be saved.
I'd prefer it if I got a few of his cast-off girls, though. I hear they're normally in pretty good conditition and with very little wear, except Honor Blackman.
Re:Digital watch a step backwards (Score:3, Interesting)
PXL-2000 (Score:4, Interesting)
audio (Score:2)
How appropriate... (Score:5, Funny)
The first Diskmen ws the smalest? (Score:4, Interesting)
Reminiscing (Score:5, Funny)
When you performed an arithmetic operation the whole screen would turn to garbage for a moment, then the answer would be displayed.
I never saw this for myself, but he claims that if you tried to divide by zero the machine would just keep chugging away forever.
The bone phone lives! (Score:2, Informative)
Remembering.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Kaypro II (Score:2, Funny)
Donkey Kong (Score:3, Interesting)
The Scientific Calculator Watch (Score:2)
CB Receiver (Score:3, Funny)
Early walkman (Score:5, Interesting)
missing the point (Score:2)
Re:Early walkman (Score:5, Interesting)
I always wondered why they got rid of that feature.
Hehehe.... I do that.... (Score:5, Interesting)
my favorite 80s Gadget: Seiko TV Wrist Watch (Score:5, Informative)
mirror (if needed) (Score:5, Informative)
Old car radios? Where can I find one? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old car radios? Where can I find one? (Score:2)
Weird answerphone for the car (Score:2, Interesting)
The speakers says "Tap Here" and you do... a few seconds later your message starts playing out.
I have no idea what possible use it could be, but I am pretty sure if it was used now some little git would smash the window just for fun...
Paul.
older than 70s... (Score:4, Interesting)
should of googled first: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:older than 70s... (Score:3, Informative)
80's gaming (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:80's gaming (Score:3, Informative)
Gyromite was a LOT more fun to play without that damn robot.
I remember... (Score:5, Interesting)
Good times.
Tom Scholtz's Rockman (Score:4, Interesting)
Sony vinyl discman (Score:2)
Of course you couldn't use this while walking, or even jogging or in a car, but it was the smallest record player I've ever seen. Does anyone know the model number or have more info?
Super 8mm Home Projector (Score:5, Interesting)
He desperately wants to convert them to digital format, because they're really fragile. Any pointers, one how to go about this in a cost-effective manner?
We've tried the brute-force method of re-filming the projected video off the wall, but it's *very* lossy. Some of the rare stores that do it charge anything from $5.00 per foot of film and up, which will cost a *lot* of money for the 200 odd reels lying around.
Not exactly on topic, but any pointers to do it at home (I am willing to shell out upto $1000, if I need to buy a kit or something) will be *most* welcome.
Thanks!
Re:Super 8mm Home Projector (Score:2)
I haven't looked in a couple of years (yeah, like since 99'!) but there are companies on the web who will "lovingly" (read:expensively) transfer your super 8's to VHS/DVD. If you can find a home-brew solution I'd be very interested, too!
Re:Super 8mm Home Projector (Score:5, Informative)
Your projector might be at more fault than the film's mechanical fragility: if you're going to project your movies, get the projector cleaned and lubricated by a good camera technician every couple-three years or so. Consider finding a better projector than your dad probably bought back when.
Or spend the money to get the transfer done by a professional who knows what he or she is doing. Google on "super-8 telecine". And then store the originals carefully. A professional-grade telecine setup would probably run you a lot more than $1000.
Telecine (Score:4, Informative)
Consequently getting a good copy to tape is not easy. Before video, TV stations used a telecine [afterdawn.com] machine, which coverted 16mm film to video.
Finding someone to do it with 8mm is even tougher since the number of people filming on the format has stabilized at oh a couple thousand.
One resource to start with though is here [filmshooting.com] or here [littlefilm.org] or here [pacbell.net].
Re:Super 8mm Home Projector (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Super 8mm Home Projector (Score:4, Informative)
Pointer #1: Don't do it at home.
It's already been pointed out that your film has excellent resolution and is worth keeping. But I'd disagree that it isn't "fragile", as someone else said. If something has to be stored very carefully in controlled temperature and humidity, that is fragile.
There are many reasons to do a film to tape transfer. It's hard to find projectors in 8 mm format, difficult to get them serviced if they break (as mine did -- no one could find the parts necessary), and they require a lot of care to make sure they don't damage your film. Also, with today's computers, it's much easier to edit your footage into a nice, watchable set of family memories rather than 200 reels of disorganized family history.
Here's what I'd suggest:
1. Stop getting them out and watching them every year. Dust and dirt in the film gate can scratch your film. If your plan is to transfer them, stop running them through a motorized feed.
2. Get a hand cranked editing station off eBay. Use it to go through your film and organize it for transfer. The transfer house will likely splice together reels and you should try to group them to maintain some timeline.
3. As someone else said, locate a good super-8 telecine shop. I plan on trying these guys [aol.com] in the near future. Send them one reel and see how they do. There are plenty of other places you can try; I happened to have that one bookmarked.
If you'd like to edit this stuff down, consider standard or mini-DV which you can then load into a NLE program. Choose the best quality format you can use, and dub from that if you want other copies. Don't have it dumped to mpeg2 on DVD; get some kind of master tape made in DV, Digibeta, BetaSP, whatever you can run. This may require you to do some research into how video formats compare to one another. I'm sure google can help.
You didn't say how many feet of film you're dealing with. Assuming your 200 odd reels are the 50' cassettes many consumer 8/s8 cameras used, you've got about 10,000 ft, roughly 14 hours or so. That's going to be $1000-$2000 to transfer. Based on a quick google search, transfers look to be $90-$185 per hour -- that's 680' of 8mm and 856' of Super 8mm.
Bottom line -- this isn't worth doing yourself. The quality won't be as good and if your equipment isn't professionally maintained you're likely to damage the film. My old equipment has already eaten some of my film -- don't risk your footage. Start now and maybe you can edit it all down to a nice family DVD by your Dad's birthday.
tp
Those ear Radios (Score:2)
Wow (Score:2)
ID this Electronic device for me (Score:2, Interesting)
It looked like a large calculator - a one line red LED segment display, a number pad and mathematical operators and such. The display and keys were the bottom 1/2 or so of the device, the top half just having artwork on it. It could work as a simple calculator, but that wasn't the main purpose of it.
It had a number of mathematical games in it. A few basic ones, then there were six overlays that went over the top. You sele
Other Forgotten Electronics (Score:2)
Coleco hand-held football and baseball games (Score:4, Interesting)
Seinfeld mentioned them in "The Toys" episode -- George loved them. Ran on a 9-volt battery.
Man they rocked!
Also: my pre-Atari 2600 Pong machine: On/Off, Tennis/Squash/Pong!
Let's see, forgotten technology: my first student ID at UNC in 1989 had holes punched into it representing my SS#. By the next year they were handing out ones with magnetic stripes.
At my grocery store job in high school, when somebody handed us a credit card, we'd just walk over to this book and see if the number was one of the stolen ones (but only if we didn't "trust" what the person looked like -- i.e. a little old lady). This was because *no one* used credit cards at a grocery store -- very few people had ATM cards.
Manual "Toms" or "Lance" vending machines
The main freaky thing about looking at old pictures is seeing how all the companies' logos were completely different, but they all looked normal then!
No mention of VideoDisc?! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No mention of VideoDisc?! (Score:3, Informative)
Umm, old style video disk had one problem... after a while the disks would skip. The stylus got clogged just like on a regular vinyl player and your quality would degrade. And it wasn't like it was an easy task to pop it open and clean the head, hell no!
"Dragon's Lair" was a coin up arcade game that used this video disk technology. It didn't use player missle graphics, but rather pre-recorded scenes and beeped when ever you needed
Re:No mention of VideoDisc?! (Score:3, Informative)
The reason the game went to hell is that even an industrial LD player is not designed for the beating that being in an a
Re:No mention of VideoDisc?! (Score:3, Informative)
The Pioneer laserdisc (as the name implies) used a laser to read the disc. The discs were either single or dual-sided, and came in 12" and 8" sizes. This contactless system means that the discs can last practically forever (not withstanding glue problems on the two halves of the disc).
The RCA system used an actual pickup that rode on the disc. Because the disc was sensitive to rough handling, it came in a large hard plastic sleeve. You would flip a lever on the front of the player, insert the
Re:WOW! (Score:3, Informative)
Is there a good collection of 80's electronic toys (Score:3, Interesting)
One interesting thing was the integration - I have a cassette tape player from 1987 that has an electronic basketball game built into it.
Other interesting toys from the 80's that I'd be interested in seeing would be the XL video camera that used cassette tapes to record video onto.
Teddy Ruxpin (another casste based toy) is from the 80's as well.
If you notice on the parent site - a lot of things deal with cassette tape and radio - I would say 80's was defined by the cassette tape.
Before there was Game Boy (Score:3, Interesting)
Mirror (Score:4, Informative)
Got it before they took it down.
Phone that used punch cards for dialing (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:/.'d already (Score:3, Informative)
What's a Magical Gadget? Your co-host of Pocket Calculator, Paul, gets full credit for the name of this feature. This is where you can find photos of those unusual items which somehow missed our keen attention in the 70s and 80s. Be it a specialty product, electronic novelty or an utter boondoggle from a major electronics outfit of the day, we'll dig 'em up and talk about 'em. We know there's lots of them out there, so if you've got one, conta
Re:Tomy Cassette Robot (Score:3, Funny)