Open Thread

Open Thread Update: What’s Your Old School Tech?

Readers chime in with their vintage tech, from manual typerwriters and VHS players to rotary phones to one really unique bit of cookware from the 70’s.

Last time we asked about vintage technology  – and typewriters, VHS players and rotary phones lead the parade….led by Reader Sharon H.

I have a beautiful 1940’s Royal manual typewriter that I used for almost 20 years working at a university library. Other people got fancier electric typewriters, but I was the only one who could type along the very top edge of a card catalog card. :-) I keep it because it is an engineering marvel and works great, I still use it occasionally. Kids love to see it working, “Wow!!! It prints as soon as you type! That is so cool, we should have one too.”

Reader Bren’s manual has some history.

I have a manual typewriter that was my mothers. I am 78 years old so this typewriter is old old old. I keep it because it was my mothers. My mother came from rural VA but her parents sent her to DC for more opportunity. She went to Cortez Peters Business School where she became an expert typist and qualified for a federal government job as a clerk typist. Over the next 30 years she rose through the ranks and retired as a contract specialist. I used this typewriter in college.

Reader Francis helped out all those manual (and early Selectric) fans with a bit of advice – a source for typewriter ribbons! Who knew?!

Check out http://www.ribbonsunlimited.com for a replacement ribbon!

They have ribbons for every imaginable machine, in all sorts of colors and combinations.

HOLD THE PHONE!

Rotary phones got love from Reader Beth, who uses her in emergencies…and to prank the youngsters.

My rotary corded vintage gold phone is the only one that works if the power goes out for any length of time. Besides, it is fun to show youngsters and ask them to try to make a call. They have no idea what to do.

Other old school tech fans are Reader Dorothy and her camera collection (even a Brownie!) and several VHS fans (PR’s VHS camcorder) and Dr. Jeanne‘s trifecta of trimline phone, Smith Corona and a VHS player – keep on trucking, Dr. J.!  And I can relate to Reader Cary, a fellow vintage audio equipment owner…

I still have a stereo component system (amplifier, turntable, speakers) set up in my den that dates back to 1970. It still works, perhaps because I haven’t used it regularly over the last couple of decades. But I need it to play any of my 100 or so vinyl albums I still have from the 1960s/70s.

(Here’s a tip for Cary and other old school audiophiles with tube amps, check out TubeDepot.com.)

MOST UNIQUE VINTAGE TECH

Reader Nancy takes the crown with this one…

I have a Farberware UltraChef machine from the late 70s….food cooks in a closed glass cylinder that rotates. Everything I’ve made in it is delicious…

Here’s a Youtube from another owner that shows it in action.

We’ll keep this open for more entries from readers – is there someone with a bit of vintage tech older than 1940?  Let’s hear it!

 

ORIGINAL COLUMN

No ‘old school’ technology is really ‘vintage” if it still works. Sort of. 

One of my laptops is by modern standards, ancient.  It’s still running Windows 7, which is the last version of Windows that a person could actually own. The battery is dying and finding a replacement is Holy Grail-level difficult.

I don’t care. I can’t reconcile myself to buying a new laptop  because I dislike the idea of paying over and over for something I should be able to buy once and keep  (and yes, I lost the CD).

And that’s not even my oldest technology – I have a Dell Dimension XPS-B series from…wait for it…the 90’s. It’s still running XP and I still use it because my legacy programs won’t run on anything else.

I also have an original “La Machine” from the late 80’s – a vintage item still cranking along, and missing a few parts….kind of like me!

I thought I won the  “Oldest Technology” contest but I heard a rumor some folks still use…rotary phones.

YOUR TURN

What about you? What’s the oldest technology you own and why have you kept it? Tell us about it in the comments!

Virge Randall is Senior Planet’s Managing Editor. She is also a freelance culture reporter who seeks out hidden gems and unsung (or undersung) treasures for Straus Newspapers; her blog “Don’t Get Me Started” puts a quirky new spin on Old School New York City. Send your suggestions for Open Threads to her at editor@seniorplanet.org.

 

COMMENTS

16 responses to “Open Thread Update: What’s Your Old School Tech?

  1. I still have my father’s c.1950 Victrola, c.1950 Royal portable typewriter, and c1950 Keystone 16mm film projector. I have my mother’s c1950 Sunbeam Mixmaster and the family’s 1953 17″ Emerson b&w tube TV. I still have my
    c1963 Kodak Hawkeye Flashfun roll film camera, c1965 Zenith transistor radio, c1970 Rival Crockpot, c1970 Hitachi portable b&w TV, c1972 Super 8 movie camera and Dual 8 film projector (forgot brands), c1985 RCA VHS camcorder, c1985 Sharp VCR, c1990 computer, c1995 CD player.

  2. I have a beautiful 1940’s Royal manual typewriter that I used for almost 20 years working at a university library. Other people got fancier electric typewriters, but I was the only one who could type along the very top edge of a card catalog card. :-) I keep it because it is an engineering marvel and works great, I still use it occasionally. Kids love to see it working, “Wow!!! It prints as soon as you type! That is so cool, we should have one too.”

  3. My rotary corded vintage gold phone is the only one that works if the power goes out for any length of time. Besides, it is fun to show youngsters and ask them to try to make a call. They have no idea what to do. However, it is not used on a regular basis and is stored away in an obscure corner.

  4. I have a Farberware UltraChef machine from the late 70s….food cooks in a closed glass cylinder that rotates. Everything I’ve made in it is delicious. I also have my 1975 IBM Selectric – non-correcting, with fabric ribbon. It is nearly impossible to get replacement ribbons. My mother used it for years, even after she got her first (& only) desktop computer. I don’t think she ever typed a letter on it — always the Selectric!

  5. Wow, Virge, I can’t top what you have.
    However, I still have Smith Corona electric typewriter I used in grad school decades ago, made of metal. And it works.
    My land line trimline phone still works, attached to an answering machine.
    My flat screen TV has VHS and DVD players attached. Of course I turned off the TV in November 2016, but stuff still works.
    Brokenhearted when my bygone standalone had bootleg Windows installed, and I no longer could use DOS screensaver or WordPerfect.

  6. I have a manual typewriter that was my mothers. I am 78 years old so this typewriter is old old old. I keep it because it was my mothers. My mother came from rural VA but her parents sent her to DC for more opportunity. She went to Cortez Peters Business School where she became an expert typist and qualified for a federal government job as a clerk typist. Over the next 30 years she rose through the ranks and retired as a contract specialist. I used this typewriter in college.

  7. I still have a stereo component system (amplifier, turntable, speakers) set up in my den that dates back to 1970. It still works, perhaps because I haven’t used it regularly over the last couple of decades. But I need it to play any of my 100 or so vinyl albums I still have from the 1960s/70s.

Leave a Reply

Senior Planet’s comments are open for all readers/subscribers; we love hearing from you! However, some comments are not welcome here as violations of our Comment Policy. If you would like to express a comment about Senior Planet locations or programs, please contact info@seniorplanet.org. Want to continue the conversation? Start your own discussion on this topic on Senior Planet Community.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *