I've lived through
Vinyl - 45s, 33.3s and 78s
Reel to Reel
8-Track
Casette
CD
>B&W TV
>Color TV
> No remote control. Kids were the remote. Get up there and turn the dial to 13, son. Star Trek is on.
>Antenna that you had to run to the TV and hope to get the alligator clip undone before lightning hit in a storm
>Cable with ten marvelous channels including Cousin Cliff, sponsored by Jack's!
>Dialing for Dollars on WBRC (Tom York, Joe Langston, Pat Gray with weather, so awesome)
>Pay Networks -- first I ever saw was HBO. Begged my grandmother to let me give her money I earned in the summer so she could subscribe to HBO. I watched KISS Live from Japan on a 19" color TV. She woke up and saw it, was horrified and cancelled the subscription.
>Satellite dishes large enough to contact the Space Station mounted in the front yard
>Beta -- those enormous CDs were awesome, so much clearer and more durable than the VHS
>VHS
>DVD
>Blu Ray
> AM Radio (listened to Chicago rock station at night)
> FM Radio
> Boom Boxes (CD and Cassette)
> Sony Walkman
> iPod
> Satellite Radio
> Internet Radio
When I think of the progression of watching Lawrence Welk and Hee Haw on my grandmother's hazy black and white console that had only at best a 19" screen to watching live 3D ball games on a 70" flat screen (that is lighter than the 19" was) I'm left agape.
I will confess that I miss the slightly burned smell that used to emanate from the back of televisions after they'd been around for a while and dust accumulated on the heated tubes in the back. I miss that noise the TV would make when you turned it on and the anticipation you felt as you watched that white dot expand and struggle to balance itself out. I miss TV stations "flipping." When was the last time any of you watched a show where the screen "flipped"?
Check out the remote