AggieMike88
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2010
- Messages
- 20,804
- Location
- Denton, TX
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The original "I don't know it all" of aviation.
Paging @RyanB...when you can remember a time when shirts had pockets.
Paging @RyanB...when you can remember a time when shirts had pockets.
Finish the sentence.
I know I’m getting old when absolutely nobody I work with knows what “the San Francisco treat” refers to.
When you can finish the sentence "Out of the blue of the Western sky comes..."The 1960's equivalent of the Tortinos pizza.
When you can finish the sentence "Out of the blue of the Western sky comes..."
I listen to the 80s channel quite a bit. Class of '87 here. !
Young punk. Get offa my lawn!! (Class of 84, early graduate).
well you may as well go with him Rusty. Class of ‘81
Texas A&M Class of ‘88
.45-ish per gallon for leaded regular when I started driving, if I recall correctly. A pack of smokes was .48.When I was riding the bus to jr. high school, I saw a gas station advertising fuel for $0.98
Gee, thanks. '78 here. My oldest graduated in '98.C. You participate in an Internet thread where everyone tries to show how old they are by saying “class of 80-something,” and you are class of 79.
Where I was living in '97, a new convenience store/gas station opened up 3 or 4 blocks away called Smoker's Express (not PC today). They sold gas for $0.799 for the first several months. I was driving a stick shift Saturn at the time getting 40 mpg highway. Life was good.When I was riding the bus to jr. high school, I saw a gas station advertising fuel for $0.98
And you remember being the remote control.T.V.'s that had channel dials, UHF & VHF, and you only had a few channels to choose from.
man, you guys graduated??
I find it morbidly fascinating that as a population, we will whine and moan about the cost of a gallon auto fuel, but gladly pay the per gallon price of a cup of coffee at Starbucks..45-ish per gallon for leaded regular when I started driving, if I recall correctly. A pack of smokes was .48.
Zenith’s “Space Command” remote that used a plinking sound the TV listened for to change channel or volume.T.V.'s that had channel dials, UHF & VHF, and you only had a few channels to choose from.
Hah, you babies. I think my first recollection of gas prices was when my father complained it went from .279 to .299. We are now 20 times that, thanks to our magnificent monetary policy.
Or “dial” to call.For me, it was realizing that an entire generation has no practical idea of why we "hang up" a phone to end the call.
The Bridge on XM is not too bad. You know you're getting old when your only Cola concern is not about the one you drink.Young punk. Get offa my lawn!! (Class of 84, early graduate).
I've grown tired of the 80s channel on XM and now alternate between 70s and Classic Rewind.
I remember in Ft. Worth in the 60's gas wars with $.19/gal prices.When I was riding the bus to jr. high school, I saw a gas station advertising fuel for $0.98
I remember those! Used them, in fact. Class of ‘66.when you recall electric typewriters were only for the advanced typing students
and computer science class involved IBM punch cards and centralized card readers.
Speaking of... I've got a Selectric III here, anybody want it? I picked it up at a sale when a local business closed. I used to be fairly good at Selectric work; the first IBM systems I learned to repair used a 1052 for the console. I don't have the manuals, or the required lubricants, and the thing needs a tune-up. I'll hate to scrap it, but I'll hate to ship it even more. Free to a good home, but you gotta pick it up.when you recall electric typewriters were only for the advanced typing students
and computer science class involved IBM punch cards and centralized card readers.
I must be really old. I remember seeing the world's first touch tone phone at the Seattle Worlds Fair in 1962.Or “dial” to call.
When we went to fill our go-kart with gas, it was $.25/gal - but we could only afford to put half a gallon in the metal gas can.When I was riding the bus to jr. high school, I saw a gas station advertising fuel for $0.98
We had a Smith-Corona manual typewriter growing up, messy ribbon and all. No electric/Selectric fancy stuff in our home!Speaking of... I've got a Selectric III here, anybody want it? I picked it up at a sale when a local business closed. I used to be fairly good at Selectric work; the first IBM systems I learned to repair used a 1052 for the console. I don't have the manuals, or the required lubricants, and the thing needs a tune-up. I'll hate to scrap it, but I'll hate to ship it even more. Free to a good home, but you gotta pick it up.
Quite a few years ago now, my mom was working in the accounting department of a business. I don’t remember the details, but there was one person who needed a specific version of a W-2 or 1099 or something that their software couldn’t do for some reason. The office manager asked my mom if she could fill it out on a typewriter if they could come up with one. She said “yes”, and had to stop herself from asking, “can’t everyone?”when you recall electric typewriters were only for the advanced typing students