Not a small number of articles I illustrated for Ruralite were about children and parantage.
(Have no noticed the word "parantage" is being rapidly replaced by "parenting"? There's a subtle difference, but I suspect in the end the new use will obliterate the old.)
It was fun drawing the old TV. Even in the late 90's TV's were more modern looking than this, but I recall as a kid having the family's cast off old model in my room. Other kids must also have benefited from planned obsolescence the same way. Notice the old cable box though. That pretty much was state-of-the-art in the 1991.
(Have no noticed the word "parantage" is being rapidly replaced by "parenting"? There's a subtle difference, but I suspect in the end the new use will obliterate the old.)
It was fun drawing the old TV. Even in the late 90's TV's were more modern looking than this, but I recall as a kid having the family's cast off old model in my room. Other kids must also have benefited from planned obsolescence the same way. Notice the old cable box though. That pretty much was state-of-the-art in the 1991.
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British TVs all switched to push-buttons when colour took off in the 1970s. When I visited New York in 1981 I was amused to see ads for VCRs with rotary dials (and wood panelling). To me that seeemd like a massive step backwards for what was supposed to be such a high-tech country.
That "sphinx" pose that kids adopt always looks so casual and natural. I can just imagine the kid's mother saying "why don't you use a chair?" and the kid being totally bewildered by the question.
That "sphinx" pose that kids adopt always looks so casual and natural. I can just imagine the kid's mother saying "why don't you use a chair?" and the kid being totally bewildered by the question.
I remember my folks had a colour TV in the late 60's, and one of the earliest remotes. It had four buttons. You pushed them in against some sort of resistence and then something snapped and I almost think you could hear a tiny "Piiiiiing". It didn't change the channels or volume with a light beam like modern remotes. It send an ultrasound signal. I don't have the remote of course, but I do have a drawing I did of it... a few decaces ago.
It's funny, I remember back in the mid 80's needing a cable box to watch cable, and then they started making TVs regularly that were able to have more than a few set channels, and Cable boxes dissappeared, until the mid 90's when inexplicably, they suddenly came back.
I had a similar set to that one in my room as a kid. I'm slightly amused remembering this, but it was made by Mongomery Ward.
I had a similar set to that one in my room as a kid. I'm slightly amused remembering this, but it was made by Mongomery Ward.
HBO required cable operators to cary their program on weird radio frequencies so television tuners would need help. The idea was to control who could watch. This expanded to a full blown CATV only band plan that reallocated FM broadcast, aironautical mobile, amature radio and public safety radio frequencies to CATV channels. TV makers started using varactor tuned VFOs instead of the big rotary switch to select these channels making the cable tuner superflous. HBO then made cable operators use other methods of "conditional access". Incidentally, the rotary switch didn't just select channels. It usually had fairly good bandpass filters in it that were eliminated when the knob went away. Those filters were sorely missed by many people for many years. Without the bandpass filter for each channel television sets suffered from signal interferrence problems. Then came QAM. Digital cable channels that let cable operators stuff more that one program into each channel. MPEG encoding of aural and visual elementary data streams which were then multiplexed into a multiprogram transport stream with data table added to make separating the programs possible. The digital data can be scrambled or even encrypted to control who can watch.
Then came the Internet which opened a whole other can of worms.
(I am gonna shut up now.)
Then came the Internet which opened a whole other can of worms.
(I am gonna shut up now.)
I remember the "outer dial" or whatever, that you fiddled with if the channel wasn't coming in clear. But those actually disappeared before the channel selector dial. At some point I guess it wasn't thought needed -- maybe some sort of automatic filter had been built in.
Cable? what is this "cable" you speak of? When I had a TV of similar vintage my family got ABC or NBC . . . and maybe PBS when the wind was right. Power rotor control for the antenna on the roof sat on top of the TV though . . . of course, only having a couple of channels is one of the reasons I got so much done in school . . . come to think of it, not having cable is probably one of the reasons I get anything done now . . . proabably why I like this pic so much.
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