โMay-16-2021 05:32 PM
โMay-18-2021 09:45 AM
Moderator wrote:
At dinner last night, a guest was curious as to what a two humped camel was called. Siri, on my Iphone, gave a quick answer and all welcomed quick access to the information. ๐
โMay-18-2021 09:38 AM
curt12914 wrote:BarabooBob wrote:
In the town of Hill Point, WI there is a working pay phone in what looks like an outhouse. There are a lot of Amish people in the area and there is no cell coverage in many of the valleys around there. The outhouse design works out very well in the winter when it stays cold and windy from November until April.
An outhouse with a pay phone? That's what I call multi-tasking !!!
โMay-18-2021 09:37 AM
colliehauler wrote:Crowe wrote:True but this was 20 years ago before black rotary desk phones were complete obsolete.
He had no idea how to use it.
Of course he wouldn't, just like most of us wouldn't know how to use something that was prevalent 75 years ago or something we don't use in everyday life or at our jobs.
Seen an article that stated that manual transmissions were becoming a theft prevention item because so few people know how to use them.
โMay-18-2021 07:57 AM
โMay-18-2021 07:20 AM
Moderator wrote:
At dinner last night, a guest was curious as to what a two humped camel was called. Siri, on my Iphone, gave a quick answer and all welcomed quick access to the information. ๐
โMay-18-2021 06:55 AM
โMay-18-2021 06:41 AM
โMay-18-2021 05:00 AM
โMay-18-2021 03:03 AM
โMay-18-2021 02:52 AM
Deb and Ed M wrote:Yea, I've turned around on a trip out of town to retrieve my cell phone just in case a emergency occurs. Even though you only use a tenth of what your phone can do it's there if you decide to use it in the future.
Cell phones gave us the freedom to travel. Ed's trucking company demanded 24/7 phone monitoring - when a driver needs info, they need it NOW. The only time we could take a vacation was when we could get someone to "take the phones". Now technology lets us be on the road, sightseeing - and still tend to business.
I'm grateful for the technology, even though I only use a tenth of what my phone is capable of...LOL!
โMay-17-2021 06:39 PM
โMay-17-2021 06:28 PM
Mike134 wrote:The local radio station in Ely use to broadcast messages to people in remote areas of the Boundary Waters without communication.
We went on a 2 week canoe trip in the Boundary waters back in '75 No way to contact us or find us. We just crossed our fingers when we got back everyone would still be there. Can you imagine what our grandparents/great grandparents went though sending their sons to war and no contact not even a letter for 6 months?
Yeah folks are just a bit to wrapped up in the idea of "cell phone security"
โMay-17-2021 06:06 PM
โMay-17-2021 05:54 PM
BarabooBob wrote:
In the town of Hill Point, WI there is a working pay phone in what looks like an outhouse. There are a lot of Amish people in the area and there is no cell coverage in many of the valleys around there. The outhouse design works out very well in the winter when it stays cold and windy from November until April.
โMay-17-2021 05:30 PM