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I used to love the cards with a stick of gum
Is that a young Toto Wolff?
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Where you were when this iconic photo was taken on Christmas Eve 1968.
Fourpence a bag?? They must be the later ones - I'm sure I remember them being threepence.Please tell me I’m not the only one to remember these.View attachment 44193
My first mobile phone was two treacle tins joined together with a long piece of string. Never got any nuisance calls.
I'd copyright that...Probably got the best answer to that..I was a child in Zambia, sub-Saharan Africa. We had no telly and had to wait for a photo set to be sent from the UK. Shortly afterwards we travelled to the neighbouring country of Rhodesia where the Bush War was getting serious after UDI.
Crossing over the border at Kariba Dam the soldiers were twitchy. My grandmother was white and British, like us, but her papers were out of order and she was arrested. Then the Rhodesians searched our VW Kombi for contraband..and found plenty, as we were taking banned papers and materials hidden in various cupboards.
It wasn`t looking good...then the soldiers found the set of pictures from NASA. They hadn`t seen them before.
They quietly passed them around....it was a `moment`. Black, White, Rhodesian, British, Zambian...we all just looked at that Blue Marble. It was very quiet. Even as a child, I could see how moved everyone was..this was beyond colour.
The soldiers passed us everything back, including the contraband, and Gran ( :) ) and sent us on our way.....
Has ceefax and teletext been mentioned?
Steam engine wheel tappers.
Yes but worth another mention, the days before we all had internet access at home.
This is video brilliant and as one comment says strange how you don't miss something until its gone.
I remember in the mid-80's switching to a cordless phone with a massive extending antenna that allowed us to roam around the house and talk.
Along the lines of the old rotary phones, I don't know if you had this in the UK but in the US we had something called a "party line" in the late 70s (I grew up in the country on a farm) where we shared the circuit with a few other families. I don't think it was very common even then because it went away in the early 80s. Nothing more irritating than going to place a call and hear someone already talking on it. You had to keep checking and wait your turn.
I remember in the mid-80's switching to a cordless phone with a massive extending antenna that allowed us to roam around the house and talk.
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