20 Gadgets From The 1970s That Were AHEAD of Their Time!

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Komentáře • 223

  • @Pegfoxx
    @Pegfoxx Před měsícem +77

    Man I would give up everything I own today to go back to the 70s & 80s. Truly the best years of my life.

    • @michellelogreco3351
      @michellelogreco3351 Před měsícem +9

      I agree completely!!!!

    • @Bukkie661
      @Bukkie661 Před měsícem +6

      I miss the 70's. Women still had class in those days. The only downside of those years is that we all thought that money was endless and we seriously burnt money like there was no tomorrow. We're coming up to 50years of paying for our hubris in the 70s.

    • @barryFLASHallen
      @barryFLASHallen Před měsícem

      @@Bukkie661Don’t you mean the 1980’s?

    • @wtmayhew
      @wtmayhew Před měsícem +2

      I won’t miss the nuclear hair trigger under which we were living back then. We’re still just minutes away from doom, but several technical failures in the 1970s and again in the 1980s brought us to within seconds of accidental Armageddon.

    • @wtmayhew
      @wtmayhew Před měsícem +1

      @@barryFLASHallen I don’t know about classiness of people of either sex in the 1970s and 1980s. I seem to have run across plenty of rather coarse people back then - probably about the same number as there are in the 2020s. You could always put on your Walkman headset and block it out, well at least after 1979 you could. Bell bottom jeans seemed kind of unclassy, I won’t miss those.

  • @Derpy1969
    @Derpy1969 Před měsícem +46

    Pong wasn’t ahead of its time. It was exactly the right product at the right time.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace Před měsícem

      I lived in a house with some stoners who had one. Yeah, right product at right time.

    • @montana01971
      @montana01971 Před 29 dny

      Exactly because by the end of the 70's it was hopelessly outdated already...

  • @bobair2
    @bobair2 Před měsícem +34

    The Sony TR-610 came out on the market back in 1958,not 1970. The very first transistor radios on the market were TI's TR1 from October 1954 sold under the name of Regency

    • @mfversluis
      @mfversluis Před měsícem +4

      The video even shows a clip stating this 11 seconds earlier...

    • @fredbear3915
      @fredbear3915 Před měsícem +2

      @@mfversluis Yes, utterly sloppy production values. Even Wikipedia has a better page on all this than these people... Like the Motorola phone, this is NOT a "1970s gadget" at all...

    • @Bob-1802
      @Bob-1802 Před měsícem

      And at 20:00: the TR-610 is AM radio "only" (just 6 transistors) and... no telescopic antenna. What can we say about the rest of this video🙄

    • @ordinaryk
      @ordinaryk Před měsícem +3

      @@Bob-1802 Personally, I was annoyed by the video talking about "Atari Pong" while it was showing a commercial for the Coleco Telstar, one of the dozens of Pong clones.

    • @danpreston564
      @danpreston564 Před měsícem +1

      @@ordinarykit does seem to highlight a fairly sloppy production. All done from a few minutes on Wikipedia.

  • @rgsparber1
    @rgsparber1 Před měsícem +9

    I started at Bell Labs in 1973 as an analog circuit designer. The in-house IC catalog was filled with custom devices that could only be used in the Picture Phone. It was a massive project. The running joke at the labs was that we were so smart, we could make a bad idea work.

  • @dean-ph2ww
    @dean-ph2ww Před měsícem +11

    I was ahead of my time in the 70s. I always kept next year's calendar on the wall.

  • @larskaminskidk
    @larskaminskidk Před měsícem +12

    The first 2-way videophone service was launched on March 1, 1936 - 78 years ago. It was provided in Germany by the national post office and connected Berlin with Leipzig. Some 100 miles (160 kilometers) of broadband coaxial cable were used to deliver video calls between the two cities. Later on, the service was opened to the public, and additional lines connecting other major cities were added.

    • @xxcelr8rs
      @xxcelr8rs Před měsícem

      Germany had TVs in the 30s. Magnetic tape for recording. eel to reel. Les Paul got his from Bing Crosby, who got it from Germany US had spools and vinyl records.

    • @xaverlustig3581
      @xaverlustig3581 Před měsícem

      ​@@xxcelr8rs UK and US had television in the 1930s too.

  • @kennethlee494
    @kennethlee494 Před měsícem +7

    My mom bought me a led digital watch for christmas in 1975, I don't remember the brand but it was stainless steel with a red crystal, I was the coolest freshman in High School for a while!

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Před měsícem +1

      Quasar was a popular brand then. Texas instruments also had early digital wristwatch. I have example of both. The TI were smaller than the klunky Quasar but if I remember correctly the price was very affordable for the Quasar.

  • @timduggan1461
    @timduggan1461 Před měsícem +11

    Wow!! I was in High School in the 1970s. Some hilarious stuff.

  • @liquidninja6654
    @liquidninja6654 Před měsícem +19

    Why show a modern era bread maker? That’s clearly not a 70s model

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +4

      Not the one they show with the big LCD screen, no way. And I don't remember any automatic bread makers at all.

    • @jasonwinters101
      @jasonwinters101 Před měsícem +6

      There were no automatic bread makers in the 70’s. This was an error in the video. The first consumer bread maker was introduced in 1986.

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 Před měsícem +8

    In 1975-76 I was assigned to maintenance on one of the first computer aided instruction systems. Our digitizer camera took the capacity of a Data General 900, and still had such large pixels that very detailed pictures looked like fruit cocktail after being scanned. Our monitors were 3 dozen Sony Tritrons with special digital interface circuit boards that failed often. And we had a bank of 3/4" Sony video tape units. The moving head disc drives were the size of clothes dryers.

  • @richlaue
    @richlaue Před měsícem +3

    A friend of mine worked at a tape recorder factory, he suggested making a tape player that can be carried in the hand, and played through headphones. His idea was turned down, a couple years later the walkman was released.
    It would have been interesting if 2 companies released competing products at the same time

  • @Tricob1974
    @Tricob1974 Před měsícem +12

    The Betamax was actually sold as early as 1972, but it wasn't really mainstream until the mid-1970s. And then there were two different Beta players in the market at the same time ... one of which had longer play times than the first Betamax players. The longer-playing Betamaxes weren't compatible with the shorter-playing tapes, so this made the consumer confused as well as frustrated. VHS enabled longer-playing tapes in a much less disorienting fashion, and it paid off. It led to the "format wars" that went on to the late 1980s. By the end of the 1980s, it was quietly official that VHS had won the Format Wars.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Před měsícem +1

      Betamax was released in Japan in 1975. Maybe you are confusing with some other format like Philips VCR.

    • @montana01971
      @montana01971 Před měsícem

      @@okaro6595 Yes indeed he is talking about Philips vcr.

    • @ki5aok
      @ki5aok Před 29 dny

      @@okaro6595 Probably confusing it with U-Matic, which is also a Sony format and is similar to Betamax, but completely incompatible.

    • @adrinathegreat3095
      @adrinathegreat3095 Před 29 dny

      And before the common betamax that everyone knows, was the Phillips 1500 and 1700 systems, the first home video recorders.
      Before that the video recorder was a device for big buissness making their own promos and TV companies

    • @montana01971
      @montana01971 Před 29 dny

      @@adrinathegreat3095 The Philips VCR system predated Betamax and VHS, but only in mainland western Europe and Australia as it was incompatible with the Ntsc standard.

  • @fliplefrog8843
    @fliplefrog8843 Před měsícem +8

    I worked @ Motorola in Germany, and we build those phones. I started 1989, so the analogue Joan2B (8W Car-phone but also mobile pack) was redesigned to be digital, what increased both the Audio and the Reception quality. The 'Brick' switched also, but were obsolete when the StarTac came up. This was, when the sending power was reduced to 0.8W on handholdes.

  • @markhellman-pn3hn
    @markhellman-pn3hn Před měsícem +9

    my all time favorite !! ... the electric knife that cuts cooked turkeys !!

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 Před 27 dny +4

    You forgot to include the highly revolutionary Hewlett-Packard HP-35 calculator. That scientific calculator was the model that essentially ended the reign of the slide rule for many college students and even engineers.

  • @l32barney
    @l32barney Před měsícem +6

    This brought back so many great memories.

  • @epowell4211
    @epowell4211 Před měsícem +5

    The best 70s kitchen gadget had to be the Oster Kitchen Center: a motorized base that operated a blender, mixing bowl, salad shooter, food processor, ice crusher, ice cream maker, pasta maker, meat grinder, juicer, and possibly more. Best part of the blender function is that any regular mouth Ball canning jar could replace the blender jug, even though you could buy special Oster brand jars that mimicked the typical blender jar shape. I have my grandmothers, and it is a BEAST when it comes to kitchen work. If you do a lot of food preservation, like canning pickles or freezing squash, using the salad shooter to slice everything into a 5 gallon bucket saves so much time. I originally tried to collect every part my grandma was missing, but gave up after a while. These and built in units seem like they should make a comeback, but the fact is, stuff is so shoddily made and no one wants to repair stuff, so they can't.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Před měsícem +1

      The first model I overhauled in the 1980s was introduced in 1947. By the 70s they were a cheaper alternative to the Kenwood Kitchen Centre (a professional grade machine also around in the 70s)

  • @myplane150
    @myplane150 Před měsícem +7

    I never got the Mattel Auto Racer handheld but, as a wee lad, I did play with the Football, Hockey, and Baseball versions that came out a bit later. Still have them and they all still work (I actually took care of my stuff back then. Still do.)...😁

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem

      Me too. I have the Auto race game. Have not turned it on in decades. Kind of afraid to.

  • @aaronsnowden6311
    @aaronsnowden6311 Před měsícem +7

    Loved the speak and spell as a kid.

  • @wtmayhew
    @wtmayhew Před měsícem +3

    Even more than the instant film, which was evolutionary, the big thing about the SX-70 camera was the ultrasonic sonar distance measuring and the thus the ability to automatically focus. The electronics to accomplish the task were considered rather advanced for their time… especially in a consumer device.

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +2

      And the way it folded up flat was really cool. In Canada it was wickedly expensive, $700 !!!!!

    • @wtmayhew
      @wtmayhew Před měsícem

      @@munroborisenko7278 Thanks for the reply. Wow, that’s expensive.

  • @toddisler9656
    @toddisler9656 Před měsícem +13

    Sony's Beta lost the race to VHS by JVC ONLY because Sony refused to play ball with the movie industry and VHS sold way more movies on their format. Were it not for that simple business decision, the superior Betamax would have beaten VHS.

    • @HansWHoefnagels
      @HansWHoefnagels Před měsícem +1

      Don't forget that adult movies were also abundantly available on VHS.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před měsícem +2

      ​@@HansWHoefnagels: Adult videos were abundantly available on BetaMax, they didn't pick the winner.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před měsícem +3

      BetaMax was superior to VHS, but only barely. The primary difference was play-time (BetaMax didn't get long-enough times soon enough, even in Japan it was slightly limited), not video quality. The primary ideo quality difference wasn't even related to VHS _or_ BetaMax, but instead was the source of the video, how many times it had been played, and how many "generations" of copies it had been through. And even the player/recorder related quality difference was dominated by copy protection, _not_ the quality of the tape system. There _was_ a _much_ higher quality Beta tape technology, but _it was never meant for home consumers,_ and it is folly to compare it to VHS. It was called BetaCam, had a VHS-based competitor that was similarly superior to VHS, and was _never_ compatible with BetaMax. BetaCam was intended purely for the profesional video industry, used component-video that was almost completely incompatible with any consumer screens of the time, and never had _anything_ produced for the consumer market. Prerecorded BetaCam tapes were meant only for e.g. _TV STATIONS,_ never for the house.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Před měsícem

      @@absalomdraconis VHS was superior as it had longer recording time.

    • @xaverlustig3581
      @xaverlustig3581 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@absalomdraconisAll consumer videotape formats of the 1970s and early 80s heavily compromised on quality in order to make it affordable at all. The bandwidth of the video signal is only about half of the broadcast signal, thus halving resolution. This is true for Betamax, VHS, the European VCR and Video2000 formats, and even Video8. The quality differences between all these are minor, they're roughly in the same camp. Only the highband variants of the late 1980s like S-VHS and Hi8 did away with this limitation.

  • @billkelly3679
    @billkelly3679 Před 9 dny +2

    That bread machine came out in the mid-1980s. My folks had one. They used to impress dinner guests with an array of freshly made breads.

  • @cmfrancis1
    @cmfrancis1 Před měsícem +10

    Bread makers came out in the 80s, not the 70s.

    • @richlaue
      @richlaue Před měsícem

      Yes. invented in Japan because they liked freshly baked bread. However with most of the inside walls being made of paper, the people found the machine too nosey, waking them up. Sales failed in Japan, but was a hit world wide.

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +1

      Yeah, something fishy about this. In the clip they show different models. And I don't recall bread makers ! no matter how expensive.

  • @research903
    @research903 Před měsícem +2

    The Regency TR-1 was released in 1954 becoming the first commercial transistor radio. The mass-market success of the smaller and cheaper Sony TR-63, released in 1957, led to the transistor radio becoming the most popular electronic communication device of the 1960s and 1970s. I had a Realistic 3-Transistor radio in 1960.

  • @GeographRick
    @GeographRick Před měsícem +2

    Back in the 1970s my dad was a tech guy for Indiana Bell and his company car had a radio-telephone. We thought that was so futuristic as this was way before cellular phones.

  • @gingermonroe4153
    @gingermonroe4153 Před měsícem +9

    I have a walkman
    The first time i saw that device i was enthralled!
    I had t have one. I thought it was the koolest thing. I still do
    Although tday i have music streaming off my smartphone i stll stimes use the walkman w my$2.99 headset
    Works just fine n i have a phone jack on my phone
    If u use earbuds ur catching some rad
    I enjoyed going back in time kool stuff thx f the nostalgia 😊🎉

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem

      I take care of my things and this year tried to turn on my original Walkman. Inside the rubber band from the drive motor to the spindle turns to dust over time, very sad. Even thou I had it in a box stored carefully.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Před měsícem +1

      ​@@munroborisenko7278They can definitely be repaired. It's tedious process but definitely has been done.
      The "rubber" is actually a blend of chemicals which separate back to the original state over time unfortunately. Unless you stored in a temperature controlled vacuum free from light it would go to pieces anyway.

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před 29 dny

      @@RetroCaptain Thank you for the info. It was stored in original box and inside a cardboard box; stored with stuff. But it was not air tight that's for sure. I checked the value of the original Walkman online from many sources and was surprised that it's not really worth anything ! This tells me that millions were sold in Canada and many people kept them; like me :) I thru it in the garbage. No loss.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Před 29 dny

      @@munroborisenko7278 It's more like the first Sony TV's the first Sony radios etc. I think you're right it's because "everybody has one" that the first Walkman isn't worth much. I used to have the first model Sony radio but a guy lied to me about its actual value and took it. I still have the second or first version of the Discman and it works perfectly or was last I tried it several years ago.
      This is the problem with the 'value' or electronic things;
      It's only super collectible if it was never used, still in the package.
      Once it's been used and...the headphones are damaged...the strap is gone..the battery door.. the tape stopped working..knob missing.. it's a fight for a dollar.
      The collectors pick you apart over the tiniest details.

  • @jupamoers
    @jupamoers Před měsícem +13

    That citicar could be a predecessor to the Cybertruck 😂

    • @233kosta
      @233kosta Před měsícem +4

      The low polygon count is clearly a flawed concept. It failed back then and it's failing today 😅
      Maybe it's just a cursed shape ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @chrismayer3919
      @chrismayer3919 Před měsícem +3

      Which will spawn the Cantakeroadster! 😄

  • @ConceptJunkie
    @ConceptJunkie Před měsícem +2

    The IBM 5100 supported BASIC and APL... perhaps the most widely used and beginner-friendly language of all time, and one of the most esoteric and weird languages of all time.
    Its successor, the IBM 5150, otherwise known as the IBM PC opened the floodgates for the IBM-compatible home PC market.

  • @WilliamARandolphJr-sk7dl
    @WilliamARandolphJr-sk7dl Před měsícem +9

    the picture phone would be a ZOOM CALL today

    • @LE64SAM-IAM
      @LE64SAM-IAM Před měsícem +2

      No, because it wasn't mobile.

    • @TedSeeber
      @TedSeeber Před měsícem +2

      Leading to the questiion, why is it all done in hardware?

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 Před měsícem

      The antediluvian ancestor to Skype.

  • @bindig1
    @bindig1 Před měsícem +1

    In the 70s, I worked at a store that sold Texas Instruments pocket calculators. They were displayed in a locked glass case much like a jewelry store. They sold for $300. The same one you can now buy at the dollar store

  • @-OneStep-
    @-OneStep- Před 3 dny

    Putting the sx-70 in there made my entire week, thank you for showing off the sx-70s beauty and functionality :)

  • @alexabadi7458
    @alexabadi7458 Před 11 dny +1

    Clive Sinclair was a great inventor, I still have my ZX81 and it's working great !

  • @233kosta
    @233kosta Před měsícem +3

    12:13 VHS wasn't even out yet when Sony released this. And the image quality difference was marginal at best. Sony's failure to recognise that consumers would happily trade that marginal decrease in image fidelity for significantly linger recording time and reduced overall cost is what ultimately lead to the format's demise.
    But it was hardly "ahead of its time".

  • @munroborisenko7278
    @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +1

    The way the SX-70 camera folded up flat was amazing. It was well made with real leather and brushed steel. I remember I was 16 in 1976 and saw one at K-mart in Kamloops B.C. ! It was $700 in Canadian dollars. Very expensive. Still wish we got one because I like to keep my cool things. I still have my Mattel Auto race game.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny +3

    I had the Sinclair Micro-TV in 1979.
    It was multiformat used in US, UK,
    and Europe. 😅

  • @timduggan1461
    @timduggan1461 Před měsícem +3

    Most surprising ro me in this line-up?
    The Cuisinart. I had NO idea it dates back to the 1970s. Awesome.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Před měsícem +1

      The ORIGINAL original Cuisinart was the
      Robot Coupe.
      If you have one it's the genesis of the food processor.
      They were definitely expensive and all made in France not China

  • @whiteshadow1771
    @whiteshadow1771 Před 28 dny +1

    When I was taking computer courses in 1983, our university had a few IBM 5100's. They were cool.

  • @mikegLXIVMM
    @mikegLXIVMM Před měsícem +3

    Fuzzy Memories

  • @OmegaWolf747
    @OmegaWolf747 Před měsícem +1

    I had a Speak N Spell in the 80s. Loved that thing!

  • @alextimbol
    @alextimbol Před měsícem +1

    Amazing that these things offer features now found in smartphones

  • @user-cu8tw9wp8q
    @user-cu8tw9wp8q Před 28 dny +1

    Sorry to burst your bubble, but portable transistor radios have been around since the 1950s, with the first prototype demonstrated in 1948. I had my favorite transistor radio as a kid in the 1960s.

  • @gregrees9146
    @gregrees9146 Před měsícem +4

    Also the Panasonic bread maker did not come out until 1986 in Japan, It wasn't available in the US until later.

  • @gkiltz0
    @gkiltz0 Před měsícem +1

    Sony pocket radio was more like 1960 By 1970 you already had larger better quality but still very portable radios.

  • @michaeljohndennis2231
    @michaeljohndennis2231 Před měsícem +4

    If only our parents had listened to our grandparents warnings and predictions and resisted these technological “advances” far more strongly and robustly, we would not be in our current mess today

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Před měsícem +1

    Wow, that bread maker looks like it was made just a few years ago!😮

  • @christophermarshall5765
    @christophermarshall5765 Před měsícem

    Some real "blasts from the past" there!!

  • @jamesstuart3346
    @jamesstuart3346 Před měsícem +3

    I had a Motorola "Brick" in the 1980s. You could use it as a phone or to hammer nails 😅

  • @juniourst3ven596
    @juniourst3ven596 Před 16 dny +1

    Love the Picture Phone

  • @joejoseph3078
    @joejoseph3078 Před měsícem

    I loved the Speak and Spell. We had one in my 5th and 6th grade classroom and we could use it if we earned points for good behavior.

  • @cimbakahn
    @cimbakahn Před měsícem +1

    Heck! At one time they had calculators the size of credit cards, then later on they had scientific calculators that could do algebra, calculus, trigonometry and anything else. I can even remember one made by Casio that had an alarm clock in it, and if you gave it a date it would tell you which day of the week that date was. This was the Casio CQ-1, released in 1975. It was a classy looking calculator.

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem

      In 1979 I got a Sony calculator for X-mas. It was like 2 credit cards thick. I still have it. But is was around $100 !!!

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792 Před 20 dny

    The CitiCar became CommutaCar....one of my teachers, who hated to drive, had one when I was in high school ( mid '70s) . I think they were made until the early '80s.
    A very crude form of TV existed in the late 1890s. TV was a thing in the US in the 1920s, though no broadcast TV existed, it was part of the amateur radio hobby.

  • @br6768
    @br6768 Před měsícem +1

    The engineer guy!

  • @ennsma
    @ennsma Před 6 dny

    The Panasonic bread maker was not introduced in the 70’s. Our family had Panasonic’s first model, in the mid to late 80s. (‘87-‘88). It cost my father close to $500 (Canadian) dollars at the time. That first (and small) loaf was very, very expensive. The machine is still going strong . . .

  • @Maniacguy2777
    @Maniacguy2777 Před 28 dny

    I really miss the chunky buttons keyboard when I started learning computer in 1999 that year.

  • @britz4393
    @britz4393 Před měsícem +12

    Your dates are way off...

  • @jimbritttn
    @jimbritttn Před 29 dny

    I bought a used "Pong" and used a metal bandaid can to make one of the two joysticks "portable"

  • @S.E.C-R
    @S.E.C-R Před měsícem

    This was fun!

  • @DavidFMayerPhD
    @DavidFMayerPhD Před měsícem

    Breadmaker was WORTHLESS. It made bread faster than it can be done by hand, but takes LONGER TO CLEAN than whatever time it saved.

  • @nathanmeece9794
    @nathanmeece9794 Před měsícem

    Can't understand when companies come out with new products with outrageous high prices. Prices so high that ordinary working people can't afford
    them

    • @mardus_ee
      @mardus_ee Před měsícem

      New technologies need money for research and development, and are protected by patents.
      There is also the scarcity of new product, whereby demand for the new shiny is greater than supply: the seller _can_ set a high price.
      Mobile phones need wireless infrastructure, which requires initial investments into building and making it available, which costs the operators must recoup.
      Eventually, a bunch of patents expire every year, competition gets to use those to create a similar product, and the market gets saturated, which then lowers the price.
      The market can get saturated even with mostly the same product, whereby earlier variations usually still work, albeit with fewer functions than newer models. - Consider the pocket calculator, portable cassette player, MP3 player, the mobile phone, and the smartphone as examples of this.
      Z80 the 8-bit CPU was initially much cheaper than CPUs by Intel, and so, it saw wide adoption. Once its patents expired, gadget makers began using it in even more places: mobile phones, MP3 players, even mice.

  • @michaelcoffey7362
    @michaelcoffey7362 Před měsícem +1

    Nice 😊

  • @TimeToCheckReality
    @TimeToCheckReality Před měsícem

    Polavision used the super 8 dimensions for the film. You could open the cartridge and run it through a projector. I happened to be at a hotel where they were demoing it for dealers and was allowed to shot a roll. I took it apart later.
    Even cooler in my mind was the 35mm still camera version. I was a dinner where part of the event was a slide show of the history of the group. People were surprised that some of the photos were from that day and even at the dinner. The person doing the show worked at a camera store and had their demo kit along.

  • @davelester5839
    @davelester5839 Před měsícem

    The Walkman and ear buds were pioneered by me (sales) and my company in late 70s. Small disc less than dime sizes magnets made of rare earth alloys.

  • @RetroCaptain
    @RetroCaptain Před měsícem

    I remember reading a brochure of the Video phone, Bell Canada from 1964. Maybe it was saying it's on the way but had a picture of one being used. The small oval shaded screen not the square one was the 64 version.

  • @timacrow
    @timacrow Před měsícem

    The telephone displays at the beginning were from the 1962 Seattle World's Fair.

  • @Thomas-yr9ln
    @Thomas-yr9ln Před 21 dnem

    Most didn't like the idea of picture phones because you had to worry if your hair was messed up or being in your bathrobe.

  • @Turnbull50
    @Turnbull50 Před měsícem +2

    One of the problems with early calculators are that some like the Hewlet Packard and IBM calculators used Reverse Polish Notation which was quite hard for people to understand.

    • @Datan0de
      @Datan0de Před měsícem +2

      Engineers loved it, though!

    • @richardvoogd705
      @richardvoogd705 Před 26 dny

      My school had a programmable HP calculator on 1978. I had to make do with a basic four function calculator (not HP), and was one of the first in my class.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    I remember someone having the LED
    watch in 1974 😅

  • @elfpimp1
    @elfpimp1 Před měsícem

    Wow. I still have both my original Pong and my Atari 2600.. 🤣👍

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    The City Car looks like a squashed Smart Car 😅

  • @tirebiter4009
    @tirebiter4009 Před měsícem +1

    This video quickly became boring with how much each item is now a coveted collector's item.
    I was a college freshman in the fall of 1974, and a friend's father worked at Texas Instruments. He got me a scientific calculator at a very good price. It wasn't even sold in stores yet. I had a physics prof who hated calculators. Even though he knew they were the future, his futile rage against the machine was to make each student acquire a slide rule. They were cheap, but my dad had a few in a desk drawer. He then taught us to use the slide rule, and we had to use them for the first few weeks of class. Then he relented and allowed calculators. I actually got to see technology extinction and evolution right before my eyes. How long had slide rules ruled the engineering world until then?

  • @joes9954
    @joes9954 Před měsícem

    My grandfather had Polavision. Cool, but needed a little more time in development. He had to send many cartridges back to Polaroid for one issue or the other. Funny that the photo showing the camera had a Kodak film cartridge.

  • @Archivist1971
    @Archivist1971 Před měsícem +1

    Wrong, Magavox Odyssey was the first home video game cancel that came out in 1972.

  • @wallyman292
    @wallyman292 Před měsícem +1

    Ha! I had no idea the old electronic football game was nothing more than this "auto-race" game featured here, except the screen was sideways instead of up and down! Wonder why it wasn't mentioned? The football game was much more popular. Hell, I hadn't even heard of this "auto-race" game til now!

    • @munroborisenko7278
      @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem +1

      I got the Auto race for X-mas in 1976. I still have it. The images in this video show the exact one I have. It's supposed to be the worlds 1st hand held electronic game. But when I Google it, it is not really worth that much :(

  • @munroborisenko7278
    @munroborisenko7278 Před měsícem

    I agree with others here. The Panasonic bread maker seems wrong. They show several different ones in the clip but the one with a big clear LCD is not from any 1970's in this world !!!
    LCD displays did not exist at all back then. I know, I was there.

  • @bullettube9863
    @bullettube9863 Před měsícem

    What no "Mister Coffee"? This coffee maker completely changed how people made coffee! You've also left out electric knives and portable mixers which made life a lot easier for people who consider their kitchen to be the most important room in the house! Cuisinart used to be an American company with it's factory in Connecticut, but it's coffee makers are now made in China, which is why my first Cuisinart lasted twelve years and my last two, made in China, have lasted just two years each. Why we continue to buy junk made in China is a mystery to me!

  • @peterking8586
    @peterking8586 Před 19 dny

    I remember printing off the smoke map of the Kings Cross fire on a 3800

  • @robertheitner1534
    @robertheitner1534 Před měsícem

    Panasonic bread makers did not come out until 1986, and mine still works, but still a cute if not totally accurate video.

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Před měsícem

    19:28 - released in 1958.😊
    19:40 - introduced in 1970. 😮🤔

  • @danpreston564
    @danpreston564 Před měsícem

    I don’t think you need to tell us every time that the item is a collectors item cherished by enthusiasts.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    I remember the cell phone Michael Douglas at the Beach with this phone, Greed is Good..😅

  • @perm.jensen7722
    @perm.jensen7722 Před měsícem

    Shocked to see a Cybertruck prototype 5:10

  • @noahkleugh9323
    @noahkleugh9323 Před měsícem

    Back in 1980, I had a Sperry PC Portable. I thought it was a brute with its dual 30MB HDs

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    In late 1970's Simon was fun. 😅

  • @Archivist1971
    @Archivist1971 Před měsícem

    IBN 5100 was great for figuring out Time Travel

  • @jamesmchugo9422
    @jamesmchugo9422 Před měsícem

    Thinking back on the digital watches. Everybody had to have one, it was a a sort of status symbol to have a digital watch. Now we have fully computerized watches with analog displays, go figure.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    I remember Pong in 1976
    😅

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Před měsícem

    Another problem with the picture phone is that people didnt want to get all dressed up to make or take a call.

  • @1994jhg
    @1994jhg Před 4 dny

    I was a kid back then and even then Mattel’s Auto Race looked horrible and was a big NO for me.

  • @richlaue
    @richlaue Před měsícem

    By 1974 we had programable pocket calculaters

  • @SilentCheesedude
    @SilentCheesedude Před měsícem

    12:45 Betamax did not lose to VHS because of playing time or cost. It was PORN.

  • @o_-_o
    @o_-_o Před měsícem

    Sebring Car: CyberTruck,
    I am your father
    CyberTruck: Nooooooooooo

  • @williamschaefer4462
    @williamschaefer4462 Před měsícem +1

    The Sony TR610 was an AM radio, not AM/FM ... FFS it was 1958 ... 🙄

  • @RetroCaptain
    @RetroCaptain Před měsícem

    Car phone existed in the mid 1950s. Big transmitter in the trunk with vacuum tubes sucking the battery down.
    The very first Cuisinart model --
    The Robot Coupe. Made in France. I have one with the cookbook meant for it. The bowls were unfortunately fragile and cracked at the interlocking tab.
    Very simple otherwise.
    Then Moulinex came out with a cheaper alternative and then everyone else got in the food processor game.
    Hamilton Beach was the flimsiest one imo.
    Braun was best for price and quality.
    A lot of people getting 1990s things mixed up with being from the 1970s.
    The bread maker shown (in grainy black and white) is actually from around 1996.

  • @DrakenFireen
    @DrakenFireen Před 29 dny

    i STILL have a working Poloroid Polavision and the projector box it came with! its an odd device and it still runs despite the battery clip broke and i had to make a ducttape battery pack to make it run, sadly i got no more blank carts for it.

  • @Bukkie661
    @Bukkie661 Před měsícem +1

    All items revolutionized home entertainment.

  • @ChimeraActual
    @ChimeraActual Před měsícem

    Interesting to find out that IBM PC's ran on a Basic OS...

  • @paulj0557tonehead
    @paulj0557tonehead Před 7 dny

    I had Mattel Auto Race!

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Před 22 dny

    We had the SX-70. It was nice. 😅

  • @hypercomms2001
    @hypercomms2001 Před 29 dny

    I can see where HP got the design idea for their HP-85...

  • @timduggan1461
    @timduggan1461 Před měsícem

    @16:00, freeze frame on the Bomar 901B. In the background, right, I swear it's a TI calculator like one I used to have. The buttons are familiar.