What makes you feel old?

I guess there were different markets that record companies catered to around the world.
Most of the EPs in Australia were still 7", although there were some 10", I remember dad had a Winefred Attwell 10" EP, for a classically trained pianist, she could play honkey-tonk and Boogie Woogie like she was born to it ...

T1 Terry
In the UK there used to be a snooker "game show" type programme on TV called Pot Black .. one of her tunes was the theme tune for the show. :)

 
I liked GP (the Guinea Pig) the most... talking of TV, how about...

  • Patch and Petra on Blue Peter, with Peter Perves, John Noaks and Valarie Singleton?
    ( the common kids from the other side of the village watched Magpie instead!)
  • Jon Pertwee as Dr Who
  • Top Cat
  • Marine Boy
  • Magic Roundabout (of course)
and a bit later in life...
  • 6 Million Dollar Man
  • Are You Being Served
  • Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em
and - of course -
- Fawlty Towers :)


5.25" - pfff! you're a young 'un... I started with cassette tape based storage, then upgrade to the 8" diskette :)
I'm of an era that actually used Winchester disk drives.

And as to TV of yesteryear, Phaa! William Hartnell was my first 'Doctor'. Stingray, Fireball XL5, Twizzle, Torchy the Battery Boy, Four Feather Falls. Christopher Trace on BP, Richard Greene as Robin Hood, ...
 
In the UK there used to be a snooker "game show" type programme on TV called Pot Black .. one of her tunes was the theme tune for the show. :)



I'm of an era that actually used Winchester disk drives.

And as to TV of yesteryear, Phaa! William Hartnell was my first 'Doctor'. Stingray, Fireball XL5, Twizzle, Torchy the Battery Boy, Four Feather Falls. Christopher Trace on BP, Richard Greene as Robin Hood, ...
Renta ghost with Sue Nicols and Christopher Biggins
 
As I said earlier, I remember 78s.

I also remember punching cards to input data into a mainframe computer. As a postgraduate.
I wrote whole programs in Fortran on punch cards at uni. The mainframes still used them to boot up when I started work, even though they had a room full of hard drives, each one the size of a large washing machine.
 
My first workshop computer cost $10,000 back in 1987 and had a 10MB hard drive and ran a '286 processor. We marvelled at the development of Word Wrap, where you didn't have to move words to make room if you wanted to add something, or had mistyped etc.
That computer ended up holding 10 yrs of business and customer records by the end, never connected to the internet and ran DOS, had dual floppy 5¼" disc drives and required 15 of them to do the back up each day towards the end of '95 when we finally bought a CD drive for it ..... WOW, it could hold all 15 floppies and had a ton of room to spare, but you still had time to make coffee and drink it as well as shut down the workshop and lock up, before it was finished writing the CD ..... they weren't rewritable back then and you couldn't just back up the information, everything backed up, but we later discovered it could be partitioned and hold a record of every day for a month, as well as the end of month transaction reports .... no more box of paper for the dot matrix printer at the end of each month ..... my, how times change.

T1 Terry
 
Soon youngsters will be asking "What's paper?" never mind not knowing what a printer is, and as for dot matrix. Isn't that the latest VR headset?
They already try to swipe the pages of a book, thinking it's an iPad. 😐
Kids and iPads.webp
 
Soon youngsters will be asking "What's paper?" never mind not knowing what a printer is, and as for dot matrix. Isn't that the latest VR headset?
No, that's The Matrix, a virtual experience in a virtual world where you can virtually never leave ;) :LOL:

T1 Terry

They already try to swipe the pages of a book, thinking it's an iPad. 😐
View attachment 44165
A funny admission by a couple who were having a lithium/solar/inverter system fitted to their off road motorhome. Over a drink or five, the conversation turned to embarrassing things they have done and thought they had gotten away with it ......

The couple were well outside Google maps range, so they had the paper maps out, the wife is trying to find where each direction went to at a 5 way intersection on a dirt road ..... the husband caught her doing the hand spread in the middle of the map and getting more frantic when it wasn't working .... until she realised what she was doing and looked to see if she had been spotted .... she said the husband couple barely breathe and tears were steaming down his cheeks, now, even at a restaurant, he will look at the menu and then do the hand spread to enlarge it, just to stir her up :LOL:

T1 Terry
 
That is just sad that such a thing entered your mind ;) :LOL:

T1 Terry
Not really it's a great film
3 fun facts
George Lucas allowed them to copy star wars as long as there was no film merchandise and he had a bit part
John Hurt loved doing the Alien scene again
 
As I said earlier, I remember 78s.

I also remember punching cards to input data into a mainframe computer. As a postgraduate.
I wrote whole programs in Fortran on punch cards at uni. The mainframes still used them to boot up when I started work, even though they had a room full of hard drives, each one the size of a large washing machine.
Ah those were the days. Writing programs on coding sheets, sending them to data prep to punch the cards and checking them when they came back hoping you (and they) had coded/punched it right first time.
Coded in Cobol, RPG2 and Assembler then. Thankfully that all ended very soon after I started.
 
Not really it's a great film
3 fun facts
George Lucas allowed them to copy star wars as long as there was no film merchandise and he had a bit part
John Hurt loved doing the Alien scene again
I can't get past the scene where whatever the thing is that comes up on the screen demanding payment ..... that's me all corned out by that stage .... are you saying it gets better?

T1 Terry
 
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