JiffyPop, the forerunner to microwave popcorn.
And the original IBM PC, and the Apple ][. I used to work on IBM mainframes… a rack or two of volumes with detailed schematics of every single component, and complete microcode listings as well. Everything you needed to repair or replicate the entire system.I remember when TVs (and electronics in general) came with the full electrical schematic as a fold out page in the manual.
Fill'er up with ethyl.Fill ‘er up with leaded, and check the oil and water.
My '46 Willys Jeep (and the '51 that followed) had a manual choke, manual throttle, and both the starter button and the dimmer switch on the floor.A friend and I were just talking about this the other day. I remember describing the starting procedure for any carbureted vehicle, or asking for the procedure if I hadn't driven that vehicle. My dad's truck, which I learned to drive in, was choke out, one full pump of the gas, turn the key, push the choke half way in when it fired and pat the gas to keep it running. My Chevelle was key on, 2 full pumps, key to start and pump it until it fired. It seemed like every carbureted vehicle had it's own unique starting procedure; kinda like piston airplanes.
"Flying a plane is no different than riding a bicycle, just a lot harder to put baseball cards in the spokes."Playing cards in bicycle spokes ...
True story, I used to wrestle a kid named James Bond. I won more often than not too.Back in my day, there had only been one James Bond and one Dr. Who.
Dad's old Piper Tri-Pacer had ash trays.Ashtray in every room of every building. Including most hospitals.
$.45 for regular, $.50 for premium. And this was in Canada, where our Imperial gallon was a fifth bigger than the US gallon. 1970. A quart of oil was maybe $.80, but I don't remember that so well.I remember gas as low at $0.69. Circa 1996ish. How low do you remember and roughly what year?
Yeah, in summer we were out of the house by 8am, and had to be home when the street lights came on.Leaving the house with NO ONE being able to contact you, at all, until you got back. And it was normal and OK. THAT was nice. I’d love to have that again.
Jimmy was ma boyMarijuana was sold out of Jimmy’s locker, not a dispensary.
And in every seat of every commercial flight.Ashtray in every room of every building. Including most hospitals.
Whenever the dog scratched her head and rattled the tags on her collar, the TV channel changed.Heck, check out the early remotes. Had tuned bars in them like a doorbell (only ultrasonic). That's where the remote got the nickname "clicker," back then, when you pressed the "Channel Change" button, it actually clicked as it struck the bar,
Sometimes, you could get the channel to change by rattling your keys.....
Ron Wanttaja
One of the 3 Tomahawks at the flight school didn't have headset jacks, so I always tried to avoid that one.Back in my day, no one wore headsets. You used a handheld microphone to talk with and there was a crackly speaker to listen over.
When I got back into flying after a long hiatus, the young Embry Riddle CFI checking me out asked where my headsets were. Huh? Headsets, what's that?
$0.899, 2020. Just kidding - I do remember it being newsworthy in the 80s when gas dropped back below $1/gal, and I remember it going down as low as $0.69.I remember gas as low at $0.69. Circa 1996ish. How low do you remember and roughly what year?
I remember my family's first TV. It was a 13" Teknika, encased in "Genuine Imitation Woodgrain".TVs with no remote. Hell, B&W TVs and only 3 national channels and a handful of locals. Turning dials and fiddling with rabbit ears. Aluminum foil!
I still have about 100 pounds of "clean your plate, son" around my middle. It's very hard for me to stop eating when I'm full instead of when the plate is empty.“Eat everything I put on your plate, because there are people starving in China.”
I remember looking in the phone book for my name and address when I first bought a house in 1984! lolPhone books!