The Born Loser by Art and Chip Sansom for October 10, 2022

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    C  about 2 years ago

    Subtext

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    Ahuehuete  about 2 years ago

    We used the US Post Office for “texting”. Or if we were in a hurry then it was Western Union

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    LookingGlass Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Semaphore!! Though those flags tended to be too much to … “handle!!”

    /SHMIRK/

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    AllishaDawn  about 2 years ago

    Pen, paper, envelope, postage stamp.

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    Baarorso  about 2 years ago

    We “texted” people back then by handing them a paper note.;-D

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    Lucy Rudy  about 2 years ago

    You used to be able to teletype and get instant responses, but only businesses had them. It was interesting to do that from an island in the middle of nowhere to someone back in the states in the 60s. Long distance phone calls were $25 for 3 minutes! If pretyped, the teletype message only used a few seconds to send.

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    KA7DRE Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Many years ago, our telephone system used letter prefixes for our rotary telephones… For instance, Pasco was Liberty with the letter prefix of “LI” and Kennewick was Justice with the letter prefix of “JU” Wild huh ! I forgot what Richland was … Been too many years…

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    GROG Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Ah, the good old text free days.

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    nosirrom  about 2 years ago

    Remember when you didn’t have to enter the area code to call a local number?

    Enjoy these videos. (Oh yeah, that’s something else we didn’t have.)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkuirEweZvM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZSZB0z-Nt0

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    Chris  about 2 years ago

    very cleverly. ;)

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    zzeek  about 2 years ago

    Smoke signals.

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    e.groves  about 2 years ago

    Drums.

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    GumbyDammit223  about 2 years ago

    You wrote ’em a letter, kid!

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    Just-me  about 2 years ago

    Texting was writing a letter…or in my case typing one. My handwriting has always been barely legible, including to myself. If I wanted anyone to understand what I wrote, I typed it.

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    goboboyd  about 2 years ago

    Smoke signals. We learned it in grade school. Then lads on bicycles carrying messages. Later replaced with the Bat Signal. Technology moves on at a blinding pace.

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    MuddyUSA  Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Well nephew, back in the day we had party lines….he..he..

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    Daltongang Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Poor Wilberforce Thronapple, only a chip off the old Block Head like Brutus would not understand how a rotary phone works.

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    Moonkey Premium Member about 2 years ago

    I hope he was in Uncle Ted’s closet cleaning it out for him to help out and not snooping. Uncle Ted deserves help. He will explain the history of phones to Wilberforce.

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    hooglah  about 2 years ago

    It’s called a “letter”.

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    KEA  about 2 years ago

    Good example of how one’s thinking is prejudiced by the environment in which they live.

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    ncorgbl  about 2 years ago

    Tucked away in a drawer is my Sharp calculator/phone dialer from the 1980s. It has a speaker on the back that you held to the mouthpiece of a rotary phone, pushed the button for the stored number and it played the tones for dialing that number. It did sequential numbers too, like pressing ‘1’ for messages, etc. It was about 2" wide and 4 tall, thin, and very convenient. It still works.

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    preacherman Premium Member about 2 years ago

    Well, Wilbur, back in the day of the rotary phone, we sent letters a lot. Now, we text and email.

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    cuzinron47  about 2 years ago

    We used morse code.

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    raybarb44  about 2 years ago

    That’s the beauty of it. You really had to talk to people using full sentences. No emojis or no artificial contractions or spelling of words. Verbal communication is becoming a lost skill. Sad. Actually, the funnies/comics might be the last hope of keeping communication skills alive for the masses….

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    xaingo  about 2 years ago

    It was called a telegram. Sometimes the delivery person would sing the message or give you candy.

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    paullp Premium Member about 2 years ago

    When kindly Uncle Ted gets through answering Wilberforce’s very reasonable question, the kid will understand that we didn’t use our phones to text, stream, or take pictures, not to mention that there was no caller ID, no apps, and no internet. And of course his follow up question will be, “How did you get along without all that?”

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    Stat_man99  about 2 years ago

    This generation, SHEEZ!!!!

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    Brent Rosenthal Premium Member about 2 years ago

    If uncle Ted wants to blow his mind, he can tell him about pen, paper, cursive writing, and snail mail! Chip this two days in a row without Brutus. Is he okay??

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