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Posted by Steven Lichter on January 10, 2008, 5:29 pm
If you were Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options Henry wrote:
> A propos technology and classic movies -- although not specifically
> telecom related -- I recently saw Scorsese's 1976 masterpiece 'Taxi
> Driver' again. The scenes in the political campaign headquarters seem
> quite funny now because on all the desks there was ... a typewriter!
> (i.e., _not_ a pc or laptop).
>
> I suppose 32 years qualifies 'Taxi Driver' as an "old" movie, but isn't
> it interesting how changes in the world and changes in oneself combine
> to radically alter your perspective on things? I remember very well when
> I was a teenager in the '60s, watching the ancient films from the '30s
> and '40s. What a strange world they depicted: funny clothes, funny cars,
> even funny ways of speaking. The interval in time between now and the
> '70s is the same (or even greater) than the gap was for my teenage self
> and those old gangster flicks I liked, yet when I today watch pictures
> made in the '60s and '70s they don't, for the most part, seem so remote.
> This has to be due to the fact that I myself lived through that time.
>
> But what about changes in the world? I wonder if kids today watching
> movies from, say, the '70s and '80s have the same reaction to the 'old'
> cars that I did? Do they find them quaint? I suspect not. The reason
> could be that in the 1930s the technology of the personal automobile was
> still comparatively new. The lengthening perspective from the '60s back
> to the '30s reflected nearly a _doubling_ of the history of the
> motor-car, up to that time. The 30 years from today back to the '70s is
> only some, what?, 30% of the total history of the evolution of such
> vehicles. Moreover, look at the effects that resulted as the technology
> matured over the decades. From the 1970s onward, as concerns about fuel
> economy became paramount, computer-assisted design techniques meant that
> the old-fashioned radical differences in the appearance of different
> makes of car have largely disappeared. And not only do cars today look
> more like each other: cars of 2008 look more like cars of 1978 than cars
> of 1968 resembled those of 1938. (At least on the outside: under the
> hood, of course, there are wondrous changes.)
>
> In the world of high-tech, the comparison between today and the '60s or
> '70s seems analogous to the earlier situation with cars. Modern kids
> watching ancient films such as '2001' must be agog at the behemoth
> mainframes -- real and 'speculative' -- that they see there; that is, if
> they don't simply find those cutting-edge marvels of engineering of yore
> to be altogether laughable. And so it goes.
>
> cheers,
>
> Henry
>
I saw a movie the other day on cable that was taking place in 1950's New
York City, the pay phone was right, but the dial was True Tone, lik
today as was the Howler tone. Someone was not thinking or was to young
to remember, but no one other then telephone people would notice that.
--
The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today?
(c) 2007 I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co.
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