Hee. But no, it has to have the clicky metal opener thingies:
Officially old? I had to add “vintage” to my image search to get what I needed. ![]()
Hee. But no, it has to have the clicky metal opener thingies:
Officially old? I had to add “vintage” to my image search to get what I needed. ![]()
Well, you have all put things in perspective for me. Apparently, I’m younger than I thought!
I’m more than willing to stay older than you if it helps you feel younger.
Now, wait a minute. What was the slang you learned? I’m wondering if it’s something I’m too old not to know.
But, then again, maybe it was something you wouldn’t want to repeat.
Yeah, I remember back when school tried to teach about relevant things. I can’t imagine what the lesson was.
At any rate, reading seems like an odd way to have learned about that particular event.
Aw, thanks! I accept your offer. What do we do if I start to catch up?
I believe it was “shipping.”
Never heard of “shipping” and I am so old that I can guarantee that I will never have use for it.
One of my favorite slang terms that was not in use when I was growing up is F-bomb.
(I know it has been around for quite awhile now) That perfect phrase whose meaning is immediately apparent the first time you hear it.
Led Zeppelin IV is as old now as … well, older than swing music was when I was born. It’s so old that I can’t even find a proper reference for the 20’s. Any jazz bands I’ve heard of from that era made it to the 30s and sometimes even 40s, and tin pan alley/other turn of the century pop was still going but stretched back to the 1890s, and I’ve never heard of most of it.
I went to the Apple store to get help moving email from an old mac to a new Mac. And some of my emails were older than the technician who helped me.
Actually, the last class to have been BORN before 2000.
Not sure if that is an improvement or not …
I was in a discussion about computers and we got to the point of going farther and farther back (“I remember Apple ][s” “I remember the TRS-80” “I *built *an Altair 8800.”). That brought us to mainframes which, of course, got some of the older people talking about punch cards. I said simply, “[Plugboards](Plugboard - Wikipedia).”
My first real job the place had an IBM 407 to do the payroll. I never had to change the plugs in the boards – that had probably been done twenty years before I got there – but I had to swap 'em out to do the various functions.
Luckily nobody could top me by knowing ENIAC.
I have coffee in my sinuses now. You owe me my deductible!