If so, that would make old comic books even more valuable.Aren't comics dead now?
If so, that would make old comic books even more valuable.Aren't comics dead now?
Remember the old Sears catalogs that had pics of women in their undergarments?I miss these, wish I never threw them out.
Consumers Distributing Catalog Archive Site
The Consumers Distributing Catalog Archive site contains portions or full catalogs from Consumers Distributing, a retail giant that existed initially from 1957 to 1996.cdarchive.ca
Yep, SEARS was great too. They all were really. Flipping through them seeing what's new and available. The smell of the catalogs as well, loved it. The excitement of going to the store and ordering it, assuming it was in stock. lolRemember the old Sears catalogs that had pics of women in their undergarments?
I still remember the black dots covering the genitals.Porn mags from the top shelf
I prefer the in store shopping experience.Yep, SEARS was great too. They all were really. Flipping through them seeing what's new and available. The smell of the catalogs as well, loved it. The excitement of going to the store and ordering it, assuming it was in stock. lol
Now you just sit at your desk and click, it's not the same obviously and not a better shopping experience. Using your senses during the catalog days was great.
Scary to say this...an alarming amount of planes still use (and need) floppy disks since the planes are simply 20 or more years old, still fully operational and were never upgraded to a different storage format for updates including critical navigation databases.Floppy disks.
I said disks. Disks you perverts
Yep, I agree. We're visual beings, it's all about the sight and the touch and sometimes the smell of perfume or food in the mall if that's where you're going.I prefer the in store shopping experience.
Some things I will buy online only if it's cheaper than the in store price. I prefer to see what the article of purchase looks like before buying.
During the Cold War, USA vs USSR space race, the Americans spent millions of dollars and 100’s of man hours to develop the 0 gravity pen, (like seen on that one Seinfeld episode, the upside down pen). When the Russian hit the same road block, the very next day, they switched to using pencils.A pencil
During the Cold War, USA vs USSR space race, the Americans spent millions of dollars and 100’s of man hours to develop the 0 gravity pen, (like seen on that one Seinfeld episode, the upside down pen). When the Russian hit the same road block, the very next day, they switched to using pencils.
Focusing on a problem vs focusing on a solution.
Okay extreme righties, I await your accusations of how the use of pencils are a socialist plot.
Cool…they are still on the market today, too.It's a myth. Didn't happen.
NASA used mechanical pencils initially. As did Russia.
In 1965 NASA bought 34 mechanical pencils for $4,400 or $135 each. Big public outcry. Also, the graphite 'lead' created electrically conductive dust that engineers worried could interfere with electronics etc.
The private Fisher Pen Company had already invented a sealed ink cartridge and continued developing a pressurized ink cartridge. They invested ONE million dollars, privately, to develop a pressurized pen and got a patent in 1965.
Fisher pitched NASA to buy the 'Space Pen" for $2.39 and the first pens were tried on the Apollo mission in 1967. Proven reliable, NASA ordered 400 pens in 1968. Price? $2.39 each
Russian then also bought 100 pens and 1000 ink refills from the private company who developed and patented the 'space pen'.
Don't believe everything you read on the internet!
Fact or Fiction?: NASA Spent Millions to Develop a Pen that Would Write in Space, whereas the Soviet Cosmonauts Used a Pencil
The problem of weightless writing was not solved by either Soviet central planning or good old American sub-contracting, but by a private investor and a good ideawww.scientificamerican.com
Since when have they been valuable collectibles? Forever?Don't throw out your old comic books and hockey cards.
Old people have DVD players.DVD players are obsolete but I still see dvds being sold at shoppers...
Wow, the original converter box. Last time I seen one was the early 90's.