Back when nothing had buttons, it all had knobs and the phone was rototary (did I spell that right). When I was a kid we were the remote.
When I finally set up my own personal study, I want to get an old candlestick phone with a rotary dial. I know they're available; you just have to hook up an in line keypad.
I am definitely into nostalgia. I learned to type on an old manual typewriter. When I missed a key and my finger slide between them, the metal rims would rip the skin off my fingers. I'm certain the nun's sharpened the rims of the keys.
I actually collect old manual typewriters. I've got 9 that I display from the early 1900's up to about 1940. Then I've got about 6 more portables from the 50s and 60s. I restore them to functioning but it's getting harder and harder to find ribbons.
As for 78s, I love them! I've got an old 1929 cabinet victrola and a large stack of old 78s. Once, when the power went out, our entertainment by candlelight was to listen to the Victrola!
Party lines.... My wife worked one of those old cord boards in rural IA when she first started with AT&T and it was the Bell Companies were the ONLY phone companys.
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