November 18th, 1963: The Debut of Touch-Tone Telephones
On November 18th, 1963, a pivotal moment in communication technology occurred: the introduction of the first push-button, or Touch-Tone, telephones in the United States. This event marked a significant departure from the rotary dial phones that had been the standard for decades, paving the way for a more efficient and user-friendly telephone experience.
@TheNewsOwl And we had a rotary phone here until the 80s or 90s.
@TheNewsOwl and it gave us the miracle of boop beep boop
Don't forget.
Huge profits for the Bell System.
As it lowered operating cost by 40%, getting rid of tens of thousands of jobs.
I cut into those profits a bit...lol
It's amazing what a kid can do with some spare wires and assorted parts.
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2600 Hz. For the Win !
Yes me also.
Pay phone down in the student center.
Pay phones were easy because so many things could be used as a red box. I imagine it was a lifesaver in campuses...๐
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lol
I am not saying any of this lead directly to me getting laid....
But it didn't hurt.
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Although, none of the phreaking techniques were particularly hard I guess. ๐ค They did require a bit of specialized knowledge though.
@TheNewsOwl I had one of these in my bedroom as a teen As you can see it was rotary though not buttons
@TheNewsOwl they had ones with buttons but i liked the lighted up rotary it was pretty
@catlynne333 @TheNewsOwl I had that same blue โprincess phoneโ, but alas, with buttons.
Actually, I still have it, I kept it for the (now defunct) land line.
@nopuppet_007 they go for 300 dollars on etsy @TheNewsOwl
@catlynne333 AYFKM!?!
I really need to declutter - Iโve got 3 sets of family formal dinner sets that could also find a new home.
@nopuppet_007 yep wth buttons its worth 300 bucks
Developed by Bell Labs, Touch-Tone technology replaced the rotary dial's pulses with a system of tones. Each button, when pressed, generated a unique combination of two tones, allowing for faster dialing and opening up possibilities for automated services. While initially introduced in two small towns โ Carnegie, Pennsylvania, and Greensburg, Indiana โ Touch-Tone phones quickly gained popularity, eventually replacing rotary dial models in most households and businesses.