What became ubiquitous then went away in your lifetime?

There are the two threads, one about how things are different from when you were a child, and the other is how are things the same.

There are the two threads, one about how things are different from when you were a child, and the other is, how are things the same.

What are things that weren’t there when you were a child, but became ubiquitous or very popular, and then went away?

For me, the first thing I think about is the fax machine. In the 80s and 90s, all businesses have them and most Japanese had them in their homes. Then everyone went to email. Fax machines haven’t died completely, but most people never use them anymore.

Another invention was telephone cards in Japan. Pay phones only took coins until the mid 80s, when they introduced prepaid telephone cards. Suddenly, they had to replace tens (hundreds?) of thousands of pay phones with ones that could read the cards. I have no idea if they still have phone cards now.

I wouldn’t include Segway because it wasn’t ever that popular.

First two examples that come to mind are Friendster and Blackberries.

Stupid autocorrect in the title has been flagged.

Audio cassettes, VCRs, and probably CDs/DVDs in the very near future.

As a child of the 80s, I remember being in cars with 8-tracks, and having a record player, but by the time I was musically aware, everyone had cassette players. By the time I was in college, CD’s were just starting their rise towards dominance, and by the time I was a semi-successful working adult, individual MP3 sales via iTunes and other digital media began their rise.

The live TV / VCR / DVD / competing DVD+ formats / Streaming followed the same pattern.

Blackberries, VHS tapes and players, Video Stores, Cassette Tapes and Camcorders are some I thought of right away.

CRT monitors and ball mice came and went also.

And floppy disks.

We are so close to including messages boards.

AOL

Future? Try 5 years ago.

At least, that’s what it seems to me.

LOL Internet cafes.

In the 2000s I frequented them all the time. Slowly they began closing one by one. I didn’t notice the trend immediately.

In 2015, when I was 35, I already had Internet at home for about 3 years. IIRC my notebook was at a repair shop and I needed to print something out for work, so I went to the Internet cafe where I had once gone very regularly. It was not open to the public but the owner was there and said he wasn’t sure it was going to open again. I then realized they had become obsolete.

And that’s when I started feeling old. Seriously.

Pagers. We had one for our teens to carry, but since it only showed phone numbers, it was just for them to call us when the study group (or party) was over.

Video stores didn’t exist when I was a kid, then they were everywhere, then Blockbuster killed them, then streaming killed Blockbuster.

Cassette tapes weren’t around when I was a kid either; 8-tracks were technically in existence but didn’t become popular until I was a pre-teen. Neither are around now.

In the vein of fax machines, answering machines became ubiquitous, and then vanished.

Similar to the Japanese phone cards, might be the US long distance cards and dial around numbers for cheap long distance. Gen Alpha next to me says “long distance” is “like a big amount of miles”, so probably the whole concept of telephone long distance is gone.

1-800-Call-ATT!

I can still buy DVDs and CD’s of new releases, just ever fewer, and the period where you could get all sorts of weird, unpopular movies and obscure TV shows that flourished for a while is gone as well.

So does it exist still? Yes, but I expect it to be gone in the near future. IIRC vinyl is outselling CDs these days… but speaking of that rebound:

So who knows, retro coolness and frustration with streaming arbitrariness may be a thing?

Mood rings.

Apparently college kids don’t buy physical textbooks anymore? When I started at my current job, all the engineers had miniature library collections; now the new hires have pretty much nothing.

I guess this goes hand-in-hand with the P.E. exam becoming closed book.

Another music deliverer that disappeared was the reel-to-reel deck for home use.

Betamax, although it probably wouldn’t qualify as ubiquitous. My sister had one.

Tube (CRT) TVs.

Monaural records and players.

Transistor radios.

Indoor malls? They started popping up in the very late ‘50s, then an explosion of malls in the late ‘60s/early ‘70s and from what I can tell, they’re almost extinct.

While I know virtually nothing about fashion, it is my impression that some fashions became extremely popular and then virtually extinct. Anything come to mind?

K-Mart. Sears.

MP3 players.