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m22mike 11-24-2020 10:42 PM

1953 The Phone
 
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This from a 1953 newspaper article :shocked:

Too Many Projects 11-24-2020 10:59 PM

From Snopes... I wasn't aware of all the early developments of this equipment. Very in interesting.



This is a genuine newspaper clipping.
The above-displayed report was written by the Associated Press and was published in a variety of papers in 1953. While we have not been able to locate this exact clipping in the Tacoma News Tribune, we have found this story published in news outlets such as The Spokane Chronicle, The (Wilmington, Delaware) News Journal, The Akron Beacon Journal, and the Boston Globe:
Fri, Apr 10, 1953 – 32 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com
This 1953 prediction has proved to be largely accurate. Modern phones are certainly “carried about by the individual.” Phones can also be integrated with smartwatches, perform video calls, and provide near-instantaneous translations.
While this is a genuine newspaper clipping from 1953 containing a largely accurate prediction about modern phones, we’d like to provide a little additional context to this rumor. For starters, the person making these claims was the president of a phone company and was likely privy to latest developments in the field. For instance, while it wouldn’t be until the 1960s for the first cordless phone to be invented, and the 1980s for true mobile phones to hit the market, the foundations for these products were being laid prior to 1953.
In 1946, AT&T offered the first commercial mobile telephone service to subscribers in St. Louis. Users had to have about 80 pounds of equipment installed in their cars, and the service could only handle a handful of calls at a time, but it did mark the beginning of the mobile-phone era. Video calls, too, can be traced back to at least the 1930s. While it would take decades for this technology to be refined into a commercial product, the concept of video calling wasn’t entirely far-fetched in 1953. Lastly, it should be noted that Sullivan wasn’t the first to envision a smartwatch. While this product wasn’t in development in the 1950s (as far as we can tell), smartwatches had popped up a few times in fictional content. Detective Dick Tracy’s two-way watch radio made its debut in 1946:

Lee Stewart 11-25-2020 09:07 PM

My mother's boss had a 1967 Eldorado with a mobile phone in it. Took up half the trunk for the electronics.

Burd 11-25-2020 09:16 PM

My ‘95 jap car came with a phone from the factory. American cars were way behind.

olredalert 11-25-2020 09:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lee Stewart (Post 1524045)
My mother's boss had a 1967 Eldorado with a mobile phone in it. Took up half the trunk for the electronics.

----Funny you mention that. My boss at the used car lot I worked at around the summer of 1971-2-3 in Hyannis Mass had a 280 Mercedes SL and the phone he had in the trunk of it barely left room for a toothbrush!......Bill S


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