What "obsolete" services and/or products are still available today?

Land in a new country. Panama, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Mexico, Venezuela, Thailand for sure I would suppose it is a lot more universal than just the places I have visited, and you can buy a cell phone for less than $25.00 and buy minutes to go with it. Cheaper than using your USA cellular phone.

India is the place for “obsolete” services.

In Calcutta I regularly took real rickshaws ( no bicycle rickshaws, they bog down when the streets flood during the monsoon ) to travel in the city.

I took a real steam locomotive from Jodhpur to Jaisalmer and back. (make sure you sit in one of the cars right behind the locomotive. The amount of soot showering the cars at the end of the train is intolerable.)

I saw a donkey tied to a wood horizontal post grinding grain.

To take a shower at the home I was staying in in Goa, I had to throw a pail into a well, wind it up with a crank and dump the water over my head.

Money changers lined the street in front of the temples. They made change so one could give a single rupee each to the crowds of beggars.

Services like fixing a flat in a bicycle tire are never done by the owner. This service and others like them are done by the local bike shop for “pennies”.

Men sit in front of the post offices and sew thick cloth around your package and then write the address of where its going to on it.

Some of the towns in the south look like a movie set from Indiana Jones.

I could go on and on.

I loved India and would go back in a heart beat. The things you see and the experiences you have are things you’ll never forget.

A newspaper printer in Virginia doesn’t use digital prepress; it still uses film to burn plates. Its film and stat cameras are antiques and I’m mildly surprised they can still find film for them. They do a brisk business with realtors and student papers.

Comic book shops are getting squeezed out by digital comics, and newsstands are in a similar bind, but a fair number of both stay afloat.

Plenty of schools offer classes in Latin and Hebrew. The former is nobody’s primary language and the latter is probably very few people’s (In Israel, speaking only English is no great handicap). Both are great for baffling eavesdroppers, though.

I’d say working blacksmiths outnumber thatchers 100-1. At least in US.

Blank audio cassettes and video cassettes. They’re still around, and you can even still buy new machines to play them on, but they’re getting harder and harder to find. So far as I can tell, in North America and Europe no one releases pre-recorded tapes of any kind any more. As for the rest of the world I can’t say.

8-tracks are completely dead. Nobody makes either new tapes or new machines any more. And good riddance, I hated 'em.

Boom boxes, aka ghetto blaster, Puerto Rican briefcase. They’re still made, but you hardly ever actually see them anywhere any more.

Come to think of it, I can’t remember the last time I saw a three on the tree.

Audio cassettes have made a hipster indie resurgence in the last couple of years.

Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, second paragraph, originally published 1979:

“[There is a planet] whose ape-descended life-forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea.”

Is this joke even better now that digital watches actually have faded in use?

How about a digital but mechanical clock?

As I was growing up there was a family across the street that had one; it must have been from the 1930s because it was the essence of art deco with some Streamline Moderne thrown in. The numerals for hours, tens of minutes, and minutes were on Rolodex-like structures which would tip each numeral into the window at the appropriate time. I don’t remember if you had to wind it up or if it was electric, but the casing was in heavy brass. I imagine it’s quite valuable if it still exists.

The Rolodex-style digital clock was mainstream in the early 1970s. That was also a standard technology used from the mid-60s for sign boards in railroad stations and airports. See Split-flap display - Wikipedia

As a kid in the early 60s I recall seeing a digital clock like a mechanical odometer; the digits were printed on the circumference of rolling mechanical drums.

Somebody mentioned obsolete guns, rifles and pistols. There’s a lively market for painstakingly-reproduced and reasonably priced replicas of firearms from the 18th and 19th century, plus what you need to shoot them. Some of the big propellant (gun powder) manufacturers still make real black powder to set off with a flint or percussion cap or a modern primer. You can even get mutton tallow and beeswax to make a lube for the paper patch on your hand-casted lead bullet. You can get the mould from someone who specializes in making bullet casting supplies.

My Uncle does Player Piano restoration of all things. I have done work for him so its fun to put on a resume.

Or if your cell is unbound, change the SIM to a local one. I bought a new phone and a prepaid SIM in Sweden but the phone turned out to be wonky: I’ve ended up putting my Spanish SIM in an unbound dumb phone that works fine, my Swedish SIM in my Spanish unbound smartphone which also works fine, and it turns out I’m even getting my whatsapps in the smartphone as usual even though that phone now has a Swedish SIM and number.

Now they come with a phone attached. In a recent flight we had a bunch of young dudes on their way to trying to drink Spain under the sea; they bought the biggest set of speakers Dixon could sell them and spent the flight generously sharing their boom boom music with the rest of the passengers. The group of Spanish retired people going back home from vacation and wanting to sleep on the flight was definitely Not Amused, nor were the stewards.

My brain is having a hard time computing the idea of purchasing $2000 dress shoes and being “wise with your money.”

[QUOTE=LSLGuy]
The Rolodex-style digital clock was mainstream in the early 1970s. That was also a standard technology used from the mid-60s for sign boards in railroad stations and airports. See Split-flap display - Wikipedia .
[/QUOTE]

They sell those at Bed Bath & Beyond now. Ten bucks for an alarm clockwth Flip-o-Matic display or some similar description. I was amused at their existence, but didn’t commit every word on the box to memory when I saw them a couple of days ago.

[QUOTE=Critical1]
My Uncle does Player Piano restoration of all things.
[/QUOTE]

Cool… I knew a guy near Chicago about 35 years ago who restored the things. Good to see there’s still enough of a market for the service.

In a similar vein, there’s a large enough demand for Victrola parts and repair to keep a small handful of people in business.

Style aside, it is cheaper to buy quality footwear and have it re-done-soled than buy cheap shoes over & over. Also better for your feet.

*“The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.

Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.

But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that’d still be keeping his feet dry in ten years’ time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.

This was the Captain Samuel Vimes ‘Boots’ theory of socioeconomic unfairness.”*

Growing up near a very large SAC base in the Midwest, surrounded by missile silos, we were taught as children in the 1960s to distinguish between the tornado alert (a long sustained tone) and the air raid alert (one that slowly warbled up and down in frequency). If it was a tornado alert, you went to the basement. If it was an air raid, you didn’t need to do anything. We never had to bother with nonsense like “duck and cover.”

Nowadays the sirens in my town are tested on the first Monday at 1 pm. I still find myself catching my breath for a moment when I hear them on a cloudless day…

In threads like these it seems de rigueur for someone to list something which in no way is obsolete. I dunno if they are trying to be funny, are clueless or trying to show how super-hip they are.:rolleyes:

I think that if a service or product is only made/sold for nostalgia or re-creation purposes, it qualifies for the OP. Swards for SCAer for example.