Awww… we were so analogue back then!

analogue

Digital technology is such an ingrained part of most of our lives these days that I think we forget just how far it has come in our lifetimes.

We were once a very, very analogue people. Hilariously so. And every once in a while, just how analogue we were comes screaming back to me in a way that makes me feel very, very old indeed.

You want to feel old… hang out with a child

I babysit a friend’s fifteen-month-old from time to time and I find it fascinating that whilst this child’s life is partly a reflection of my babyhood and my siblings’ babyhoods (dummies, sippy cups, highchairs and cuddles), in others ways, it’s just so… digital.

Case in point: little Amy has an iPod and sound dock in her bedroom… and she actually knows how to use them. I recall that the height of cool in the eighties was the child-sized record-storybook combo where you read in time with the record, turning the page when prompted by a chime (or, if you were VERY lucky, the sound of Indiana Jones’s bullwhip).

You want to feel really old…

Clearly, the older you are, the more fodder you have to go on. My emailing, iPhone-wielding father has come a looong way. He tells me he used to entertain his younger siblings after they’d all gone to bed by putting a red sock on the light bulb and spinning his collection of six (vinyl) tracks on the suitcase-sized record player. (Alas, his career as a dj was cut tragically short when the suits in the living room smelled burnt sock and pulled his slot.)

We’re not changing so much as constantly upgrading our tools

In terms of the move from analogue to digital, I don’t think it’s possible to overstate the difference between yesterday — or yesteryear — and today.

But there is some comfort, I think, in seeing that as much as technology advances, it tends to stick to the same paths: we like music, so technology has made it easier for us to like more music, more often. Similarly, we like talking, so technology has made it easier for us to do that. As people, we aren’t changing that much — rather, what’s changing is the way we do things and the tools we use.

Hands off my calculator

My mum tells me that shortly after she and my dad married (so, mid to late 1970s), they were doing their taxes and needed to do some fairly extensive addition.

Having no calculator of their own, they asked a friend if they could borrow his. He agreed, but only on the grounds that he could come along to supervise use of his big, new, modern tool… the calculator. Can you even fathom someone doing that now?!

I share these stories more for a giggle than anything else — as I said at the outset, it’s not news that we’re becoming more digital with every passing second. But when you take a look back at the information highway, main streets and dirt roads behind us…. my god, we were so analogue it hurts.

Image credit: _phogra_ via Flickr, courtesy of a Creative Commons licence

14 comments

Author: Anjali Ramachandran anjali28

Do you mean a 15-month old knows how to operate an iPod? Jeez!!!

Thanks for sharing your lovely personal anecdotes. Very enjoyable read!

Author: Sara Williams saradotdub

Thanks Anjali. And yes, she knows — and presses — the play button. Kids these days…

Author: Stuart Eccles Stuart Eccles

Remember all digital media at the end of the day is consumed through an analogue medium, our eyes and ears.

Author: Nidhi Nidhi

Thanks Anjali, really wonderful article….reminds me of my mom who really dont want to use mobile phone, and even if she had to she skews her eye to dial the numbers and then annoyingly just hand it over to me and said I dont need all these stupid things to talk to someone…..we are turning so digital, but ya she still love to play computer games :)

Author: mike mike

I once cried myself to sleep when the batteries in our Pong unit died.

Author: Dr. Jones Dr. Jones

I miss the crack of Indy’s whip, I’d always take hungry hippos over super mario and feel cheated by DJs no longer spinning vinyl.

I loathe the beeps and bleeps which litter life’s sonic soundtrack, the unavoidable and constant contact via numerous forms of communicative devices and the expectance to be on the receiving end 24/7.

Author: Tim Malbon Tim Malbon

I’m tempted to try and borrow calculators for the rest of the day.

@stueccles – yes, that’s why we’ve got to start swapping out bits of our meat-bodies and replacing them with cyborg stuff

Author: Tim Malbon Tim Malbon

That explains a great deal

Author: Justin McMurray JuzMcMuz

C;mon Tim, surely that’s a blog post in itself. The top 5 things to swap out of our “meat bodies”… perhaps digital corneas with an inbuilt navigable ‘thought-screen’ interface?

Author: Sara Williams saradotdub

As long as we’re coming clean about our analogue secrets…

My best ever childhood birthday present was a tape of my neighbour’s dad telling the story of Ali Baba and the 40 Thieves. It was legendary in my house, until it got all worn out and chipmunk-esque. A suitably analogue, eighties death.

Author: Rabia Rabia

Let’s not forget about recording songs off the radio instead of downloading MP3s from iTunes or ahem illegally? You can top off your feelings of age by being able to say, “When I was your age, we had to [fill in the blank] instead of you kids being able to [fill in the blank].” My favorite is having to go to the library instead of Googling.

Very nice post, indeed :)

Author: Roberto Kusabbi Roberto Kusabbi

Nice read Sara. Incredible that a 15 month year old can!

I used to record my own radio shows on blank tapes just speaking into the radio on record. I was a cross between Smashy and Nicey and Chris Tarrant – Shudders.

Anyone remember Speak and Spell? Those were hot in my day.

Author: Sara Williams saradotdub

Thanks Roberto, glad you enjoyed. I didn’t have a Speak and Spell but I totally coveted my cousin’s — that and his state-of-the-art Fisher Price tape deck. Oh so retro…

Author: Sara Williams saradotdub

Ah, the library… that old thing! Funny fact: Made by Many is actually located in a space that used to be the BBH library. We like to think this translates to us being something of an unstoppable digital force :-)