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12 Obsolete Technologies Americans Still Use

Posted on 12/23/14 at 2:49 pm
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132247 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 2:49 pm
The article is from 2013.



quote:

However, according to a December study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 4 percent of American adults still use a modem to get online. That’s more than 10 million people accessing the Web at 56.6 or slower speeds. Some of these folks are among the 6 percent of Americans who live in areas without broadband access, while others either can't afford or are too cheap to pay for high-speed services.



quote:

Despite the huge popularity of mobile phones, there’s still an active market for pagers. According to the CEA, in 2012 Americans bought approximately $7 million worth of new pagers, somewhere under 10,000 units. If you want to be reachable, but not too reachable, pagers provide a built-in excuse for avoiding phone conversations.



quote:

So why would anyone want to use the best printing technology of 1983 in 2013? Apparently, many point-of-sale, warehouse inventory and other business systems still require carbon copy and multipart forms that work only with the hard impact of a dot matrix printhead and its continuous tractor feed. And, really, who can blame businesses for not modernizing their processes to use inkjet, laser or thermal printing? They’ve only had a couple of decades to think about it.



quote:

However, according to the CEA, last year there were 350,000 new PDAs sold in the U.S. Are there just a whole bunch of people pining for old-fashioned organizers? Not quite. CEA’s Steve Koenig told us that a number of vertical markets still use PDAs for data collection in places as diverse as warehouses and hospitals.



quote:

Good news for costumed superheroes and Maroon 5 fans, the U.S. still has 305,000 working pay phones, according to the American Public Communications Council (Q3 2012 data). But those public handsets are not made for decoration. The APCC also estimates that people used those phones to place around 50 million calls in 2012.



quote:

he CEA says that, in 2012, around 13 million blank cassettes and VHS tapes were sold in America. Though the association no longer tracks sales of new VCRs, you can still buy a DVD / VHS combo recorder such as the $149 Toshiba DVR620 and the $198 Magnavox DV225MG9. CEA doesn’t track cassette recorders anymore, but it reports that 15,000 cassette-based car stereos were sold in 2012, so the old-fashioned mix tape is alive and well.



quote:

As of mid-2012, 34 percent of adults lived in homes that didn’t even have a landline, but that hasn’t stopped the remaining 66 percent from not only using their connections but also buying new hardware. According to CEA data, in 2012 Americans bought 5 million corded handsets and 21.5 million cordless models for a total of 26.5 million landline phones. No word on how many of them are shaped like footballs, hamburgers or mallard ducks.



quote:

While many of us still have old-fashioned tube TVs at home, most electronics companies have stopped making them, and for good reason. Not only are tube TVs dated and ugly, but the effort of procuring the necessary parts, building new units and paying to ship these heavy devices overseas just isn’t worthwhile for manufacturers. Despite the drawbacks, Americans bought 10,000 CRT TVs last year, according to NPD. Many of these sets are apparently targeted toward children. If you want your kids to suffer with low-definition broadcasts just like you did at their age, Disney currently sells a tube that looks like Lightning McQueen from the movie "Cars" and another that’s pink-and-princess themed. There's a Barbie tube too.



quote:

These days, every cellphone comes with a camera, you can buy a point-and-shoot digital camera for under $100 and high-end DSLRs and mirrorless cameras capture amazing photos. Considering that digital images appear instantly, you can edit and share them online or print them an infinite number of times without losing quality, there’s little reason to use an old-fashioned film camera. However, there’s no stopping the Americans who, according to NPD, bought a mind-buckling 35 million rolls of film last year. Some of these folks are young hobbyists who like using lomo cameras and others just don’t want to part with their Polaroids.



quote:

While most people drive modern cars with fuel injections, air bags and power steering, there’s always somebody who won’t part with their 1977 Honda Civic, no matter how poorly it runs on today’s highways. If it worked fine during the Carter administration, it should work fine today, right? By the same token, Net Applications reports that 0.05 percent of U.S. PC users are still careening down the information superhighway in computers with Windows 98 or Windows 2000. The Computer Industry Almanac estimated that, in 2011, the U.S. had 311 million PCs in use. So you can figure that there are more than 150,000 people using an operating system from the last century.



quote:

Fax machines became essential office devices in the 1970s, but 40 years later, with email, instant messaging and the ability to send fax transmissions by computer, there’s no need to own one. Still, standalone fax machines refuse to die, perhaps because businesses require signatures on contracts and it’s just too easy to grab a piece of paper, scribble on it and feed it through again. According to NPD, Americans bought 350,000 fax machines in 2012, which was down 14 percent from 2011. That means more than 700,000 of them were sold in the last two years alone.



quote:

People were buying LPs back when Elvis first became popular, but vinyl records just won’t die. In fact, they’re making a comeback. Even though digital downloads and CDs are easier to use, more durable and hold a lot more music in a smaller space, some audiophiles just prefer the sound of vinyl. After years in obscurity, the LP business is thriving again with more and more new albums coming out on the ancient media format, including the latest releases from Daft Punk and Vampire Weekend. According to Nielsen SoundScan, Americans bought 4.6 million vinyl records in 2012, up 17.7 percent from the year before. While that’s a pittance compared to the 118 million digital albums sold last year, it’s not insignificant.


Posted by BluegrassBelle
RIP Hefty Lefty - 1981-2019
Member since Nov 2010
98922 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 2:57 pm to
In regards to fax machines, I know at least within the school system, a lot of smaller counties we request records from don't have scanning capabilities and can only send records by fax or mail.
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132247 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 2:58 pm to
the dial up sound
Posted by UMRealist
Member since Feb 2013
35360 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 3:08 pm to
I fax a few hundred pages a week that we aren't allowed to email.
Posted by Tiguar
Montana
Member since Mar 2012
33131 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 3:20 pm to
I think this article misses the point on a lot of these technologies.

Docs and other on-call professions will use pagers, nothing wrong with that.

Faxes, while similar to scanning, allow transmission of certain legal documents you can't send over email or computer because people are worried about alteration of the documents.

And I'm glad there are still pay phones around, cell phones are not infallible.
Posted by BigOrangeBri
Nashville- 4th & 19
Member since Jul 2012
12270 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 4:25 pm to
Vinyl Records are the best. Compressed digital files suck.

What cracks me up are these fools spending tons of money for Beats headphones( you can get much better, studio grade headphones in that price range) just to listen to a compressed audio file.
Posted by plazadweller
South Georgia
Member since Jul 2011
11442 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 4:34 pm to
To me a fax machine is definitely not obsolete.
Posted by arcalades
USA
Member since Feb 2014
19276 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 5:12 pm to
Dot matrix printers have some major advantages, especially for certain business.
Posted by Funky Tide 8
Tittleman's Crest
Member since Feb 2009
52656 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 5:14 pm to
quote:

I think this article misses the point on a lot of these technologies.

Docs and other on-call professions will use pagers, nothing wrong with that.

Faxes, while similar to scanning, allow transmission of certain legal documents you can't send over email or computer because people are worried about alteration of the documents.

And I'm glad there are still pay phones around, cell phones are not infallible.


Nail on head. This article is extremely obtuse.
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 5:24 pm to
quote:

What cracks me up are these fools spending tons of money for Beats headphones( you can get much better, studio grade headphones in that price range) just to listen to a compressed audio file.


I like my Beats. Sounds good to me
Posted by Funky Tide 8
Tittleman's Crest
Member since Feb 2009
52656 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 5:37 pm to
quote:

I like my Beats. Sounds good to me




You could have had better for less.
Posted by Phat Phil
Krispy Kreme
Member since May 2010
7372 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 6:13 pm to
I'd buy some vinyl records
Posted by KSGamecock
The Woodlands, TX
Member since May 2012
22982 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 6:15 pm to
I think pagers are still used in the medical field. VHS tapes I kind of get too, probably a lot of people running old surveillance cameras or something. The others, especially dialup internet and old operation systems I don't quite understand.
Posted by Carolina_Girl
South Cackalacky
Member since Apr 2012
23973 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 6:21 pm to
Might be bc I'm a child of the 80s, but I miss vinyl records. Cassette tapes bring back some great memories, too. Payphones are great to have around just in case, and I also kinda miss the days of rolls of film.
Posted by Alahunter
Member since Jan 2008
90738 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 6:23 pm to
quote:

Might be bc I'm a child of the 80s, but I miss vinyl records. Cassette tapes bring back some great memories, too. Payphones are great to have around just in case, and I also kinda miss the days of rolls of film.


Same. I prefer film cameras, personally. I also remember going to the mall and being able to listen to samples from albums on headsets set up along the albums and cassettes.
Posted by ehole
in a house
Member since Nov 2010
3373 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 6:53 pm to
in honor of my cousins' other grandpa's 92nd bday... here's some obsolete technology from the 1960's NASA still uses. my aunt's dad was kind of a lead engineer on it. dude has been dead almost a decade and retired from nasa almost 30 years... still toting shuttles to the pad like a boss.

Posted by WhiskerBiscuitSlayer
Member since Jan 2013
13840 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 7:02 pm to
quote:

You could have had better for less.


This goes through my head every time I sleep with your wife.
Posted by pioneerbasketball
Team Bunchie
Member since Oct 2005
132247 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 7:14 pm to
shots fired
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
260053 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 7:20 pm to
quote:


To me a fax machine is definitely not obsolete.


It's not. Many and I'd say most businesses and organizations still utilize a fax.
Posted by Yellerhammer5
Member since Oct 2012
10851 posts
Posted on 12/23/14 at 7:59 pm to
I have a pager. A cellphone cant replace what I need it for.
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