End of the newspaper, gas cars & analog TV eras. What other "eras" are coming to a close?

Small price to pay to know where all the nationals are.

It is both a percent and a flat fee, with the flat fee becoming ever more important the smaller the transaction.

Supermarket checkout staff.

Load a shopping trolly (cart?) with your goods, each of which has an RFID chip, walk through the exit archway and the cost is automatically totalled and deducted from your account.

We already have self-scan aisles in the UK which is reducing the number of checkout staff needed (or the Waitrose model where you carry a hand-held scanner and scan as you pick items off the shelf), but there’s still a risk of theft. RFID would pretty much eliminate that.

Edit: so maybe also the end of shoplifting :slight_smile:

Maybe not the end of shoplifting after all…

The era of the music star who is known worldwide.

noise ordinances, ringtones, the electric “bing” when I enter a store, the blooping scanner in the grocery store. . . when was the last time you heard an actual bell ring?

Shoe laces

round clocks (even the face fo a digital watch used to be round, remember?)

Racism (Yay!)

9-5 jobs (i.e. the limitation that made your boss apologize for calling you outside those hours) Boo!

I’ve not seen any indication at all that shoe laces are going anywhere. Even the latest greatest Air Force uniform includes boots with laces (fuzzy green IR-masked boots with laces).

What if you drive your own car? Getting around Chicago to go on a road trip back east would be impossible. And I’m not buying a pass; we (mostly) don’t have toll roads in Minnesota.

I have been wishing for years for a $5 coin.

End of littering too. Litter warden finds a RFID’d bit of litter, automatically fines the person who paid for it.

In some ways, this is almost true.

Radio drama survives in some small way, but we’re never going to see another Lux Radio Theatre, The Shadow, or Inner Sanctum.

It’s mostly just background noise, now - I don’t imagine anyone sitting 'round the radio for an hour of entertainment.

There is at least one place where radio drama is alive and well. This is BBC Radio 4. Everyday of the year this station broadcasts at least one, and usually two radio plays, ranging in length from thirty minutes to an hour-and-a-half. In addition the station has a good mix of other speech-based programmes, including comedies, quizzes, documentaries and news magazines.

The Fraternal org’s heyday is certainly at an end- many buildings in downtown used to be the Odd Fellows, Elks, Moose, Lions, Masons, Eagles, Foresters, Jaycees, Kiwanis, Knights of Columbus, Optimists, Rotary, and so forth. Every male who was anyone belonged to one of these. Now- the Masons still are somewhat active and some of the others continue as mostly charitable orgs.

Colleges campuses are becoming increasingly hostile to social fraternities. That’s not that big a deal- Greeks tend to donate significantly more money to their alma maters than the average alumnus. However, if Lloyds’ of London ever goes under, fraternities are done for.

That’s because the Masons secretly rule the world.