For some reason, this reminds me of the origin of the term “footage”, when referring to filming something. In ye olden days, film was measured in feet. So to capture video on film, you were using up a certain amount of footage/length of film.
TIL
Thats legitimately neat
Put another way: The fields of modern digital audio file metadata contain keys descended from the specific features of data-storage technology from 1912.
And people think it’s odd that we still use the floppy disk icon to mean “save”.
Hell, it has to be a steadily increasing number of people who don’t know what the phone icon is supposed to represent.
Well, someone oughtta sit those kids down and show them I Love Lucy or something, goshdarnit!
I’ve located Fred Mertz!
Have his pants completely consumed him yet?
Maybe that’s too obscure
Motion to make this the telephone icon
Mom: “Your phone is ringing.”
Son: “Could you answer it real quick while I wash my hands?”
Mom: “How do I answer it?”
Son: “Hit the buttplug.”
This got me thinking: Does this mean that kids these days aren’t doing the banana telephone thing? I’m young enough to never have seen a telephone (as opposed to a mobile phone) other than in movies and museums, but maybe I lived in sufficient temporal proximity to the era of wired telephones to have banana telephones as a part of my childhood.
You mean ring ring ring ring ring ring ring ring, banana-phooooooooooone?
Ping pong ping pong ping pong ping… Ponana-PHOOOOOONE
But it’s the best, beats the rest! Cellular, modular, interactivodular!
Seriously though, because of Raffi, it might be a few generations before people in general don’t know of Banana Phones.
That got me thinking. The universal hand sign for “call me” or “I’ll call you” is to stick out your thumb and pinkie and hold your hand to your face like you’re talking on the phone. It just doesn’t work the same if you hold your hand flat like it’s a smartphone.
Nah the younguns think you have to hold a phone like a fuckin slice of toast now anyway
Are you saying I’m obsolete?
How very dare you sir!deleted by creator
My oldest kid called it the “toaster” button…
deleted by creator
This is great.
Another music related oddity I only recently found out, Laserdiscs are analog not digital…
Technically later ones used digital audio. But yeah, it’s because they use frequency modulation rather than binary pitting
Laserdiscs were huge for being able to stop on a single frame - I worked for a place that used them for language teaching, so you had to stop dead on a sentence for it to make sense. At the time mpeg could only stop on iframes that could be 10 seconds apart, and paying to get iframes mastered where you needed them was mucho expensive (even decoding required hardware… mpeg encoding in software was a pipe dream).
Compressed video still has this problem to some extent but it’s mostly worked around in software.
Also the hardware to interface to a PC was basically a simple analogue capture card and a serial link for the control. Cheap, at least compared to the mpeg decoders of the day.
For sure! The first time I saw my animation professor pull out a laserdisc, I started to have doubts on my colleges budget, but damn, crisp, clean frame by frame of Bugs Bunny. Couldn’t be beat!
What a blip on the radar they were. I remember watching a video on acid rain in first grade, so early '90s, and that was it, never saw it again.
If you like that, you should check out this video series on the RCA CED: https://youtu.be/PnpX8d8zRIA
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/PnpX8d8zRIA
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Let me guess? Technology Connections?
Of course it is. Oh jeez I am old.
Now this is this shit I came here for!
Another fun fact: They were often not A side and B side on a single disc, but something like A side and F side. You put the whole stack on the record player spindle, it feeds one down, plays the top side, feeds the next down, play the top, and so on. Then when all the top sides were done you flipped the whole stack over and did it again. Each 78 only had enough room for about 5 minutes per side.
My grandparents had a number of these.
Yep, my mom has several albums of 78s.