It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
Back in my day :

*There were only 3 TV Channels. And there was almost always something worth watching. And if you were lucky, they had colour, and not just Black&White. And the largest set was somewhere around 15". No wide-screen (or Cinema-scope as it was called) shenanigans there.

*Public transport fares got you around 5 miles for less than £1.

*You really did "dial" telephone numbers, not push buttons.

*Cellphones were called "Bricks" because they were the size and weight of a housebrick. And cost in excess of £350. Thank you, Vodafone!

*PCs filled an entire 30Sq Ft room. And didn't have the capability to use monitors.

*Computers for home use were 8-bit, and took around 3-8 minutes to load a game from off a tape cassette. Or you had to type them in yourself! And cost £2-300. Games were anywhere from £1.99 to £20. There were no "Collector's" or "Special" or "GOTY" editions.

*Families were lucky to have ONE car, not 2 or 3 or 4.

*Being told to come in off the street where you were playing with friends at 5 or 6PM was very disappointing. "Awww MUM!! 10 more minutes? We're playing!!"

*You could go to the local park, leaving your front door wide open, and return 4 hours later and still have all your property inside.

*Holidays were to the local seaside, or historical town/site, not abroad!

*There was no INTAWEBZ! Only a few Bulletin Board Services. If you had a phone line, and 14k modem, and could afford the phone bill.

*Books were made from real paper, and were heavy! I miss real books. :(

*Remote controls, if any, were actually remote (on a cable to the TV/Video recorder) and not infra-red.

*Pop band, Blondie, hadn't brought [C]Rap to the mainstream music attention.

*You could stir the jam (jelly for you Americans) into your rice pudding dessert, turning it pink or red, and not feel silly or childish (because you were a child! :P)

*There was only two or 3 TV Chefs, not 400.

*William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy and Deforest Kelley were the only Star Trek.
In my 30s, so don't begrudge that...

Back in my day we had Kids in the Hall, Red Dwarf, and MST3K, and we taped them on VHS, and traded with friends.

We made mix tapes

We had bands with real instruments

The only "energy" drink was Jolt Cola
[the crypt entrance creaks open as the chorus of the damned wails melodiously to the entrance of a GEEZER gamer]

Back in my day, Pong ruled and in order to play anything other than Pong, you had to put a plastic cover over the TV screen - held in place by the static electricity...

I watched Select TV with my parents, waiting for exactly 8:00pm and the green button to flick on before watching Hardware Wars - a spoof of the next post...

My father came home and said we're going to go see a space movie with a guy named "Darth Vader" in it and argued with my mother as to whether it was too scary for me (at 9)...

I went to Federated Electronics to purchase a computer and our choices of monitors were Green or Amber (amber was cheaper)...

I used to go to Waldenbooks in the MALL to get my AD&D 1st edition stuff...

You could return computer games that you had opened...

A state-of-the-art computer was my Commodore 64, later replaced by an Amiga 2000...

Atari was made in the United States and knock-offs were sold at Sears...

Commander Adama was Lorne Greene, not Edward James Olmos (though I prefer the latter to the former)...

Matthew Broderick was able to launch WWIII from a 2800 baud modem which needed the telephone receiver placed onto the modem to work....He even hacked a telephone with a soda can's pull tab! A PULL TAB!!! Take that you whippersnappers....

I read A Wrinkle in Time, Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, and Choose-your-own-adventure novels VORACIOUSLY when I couldn't get at my friend's computer...

My older brother's 'cell phone' looked like a colostomy bag, weighed as much as a bowling ball, had a battery life of about 2 hours and cost over $5 per call...

The X-Men still wore purple and yellow uniforms...

Queen's new super-awesome songs were from a movie soundtrack for Flash Gordon...

And finally, You always died when a brick smashed your head after following Ford Prefect in the Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy text-based adventure and so you never got off that 'mostly harmless' planet called Earth...

}SNAP!{

Dagnabbit darn osteoporosis! My hip just shattered under the weight of such nostalgia.
When we rode our bikes, we had no helmets or elbow pads or knee pads. Also, there were no bike paths or skate parks. We had to make these things.

As children, we would ride in cars with no seat belts or air bags.
I can remember having cars without seat belts, much less airbags.

We had no childproof lids on medicine bottles, doors or cabinets. No outlet plug caps or cordless phones to keep us safe.

We ate cupcakes, white bread and real butter and drank soda pop with sugar in it, but we weren't overweight because WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!

Little League had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn't had to learn to deal with disappointment. Imagine that!!
avatar
TheEnigmaticT: Back in my day 64 kilobytes of RAM was all you'd ever need.
Haha!

Back in MY day, all you needed was a TV and Atari with the 30 something games preinstalled. Plus a little joystick with one button.
The only way to pirate music was Napster.

...Not that any of us did that or anything...
avatar
Hesusio: The only way to pirate music was Napster.

...Not that any of us did that or anything...
In my day, software pirate groups like Skid Row and Quartex had some real talent. The "Internet" was called "Bulletin Board Systems", and before there was AOL there was GEnie, Compuserve, and something else that escapes immediate long-term memory. Connections to boards were disrupted just by someone else picking up the receiver on the same line.