AT&T Archives: The Astonishing, Unfailing Bell System (1967)

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 192

  • @desertbob6835
    @desertbob6835 5 років тому +40

    I worked in the LA Grand Complex shown in this film as the LA terminus of the NBC video before it was handed off to KRCA in Burbank. The TV Operating Center in those days was in the LA02 building at 433 S Grand Ave. I worked telegraph, carrier and microwave radio before moving on to a satcom earth station in n 1986. Grand was a veritable museum of telephony back then, with everything from telegraph hubs from the 1920s, step-by-step switching and Type J open wire carrier from the '30s, microwave and cable systems from the '40s through '80s, and the first stereo TV audio systrm in the US. The buildings remain...but only as "condos" for server farms and cell providers. At its height, Grand had as many as 3000 people working in it during a day shift. Now, there's no one there.

    • @calbob750
      @calbob750 3 роки тому +6

      I worked at a Panel Switching System at ClevOH45. OBT milked the 20s technology there until 1974. Had 45 technicians until 1974. Next year 7.
      Worked on D1, D2, D3, D4, D5 carrier Cleveland Main. Fortunately, the benefits...medical and pension remained excellent at least until 2000.

    • @badcompany-w6s
      @badcompany-w6s Рік тому +1

      I bet that was a sight to see.

    • @JohnCompton1
      @JohnCompton1 9 місяців тому +2

      Bet there was an awesome nuclear bunker complex in such an impressive and important facility as that! Fascinating, commentary from all the gentlemen here...

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 2 місяці тому

      ​@@JohnCompton1LA Grand was non-hardened.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 7 років тому +29

    I remember when I was a kid in the '70s and early '80s -- the phones were always *so* much more reliable than the electricity. A storm could knock out the power -- but almost never the phones. I remember one time we had tornadoes come through, and the power was out for a couple of days -- but the phone was out for only a couple of hours. AT&T's phone-service was pricey, long-distance service cost a *ton* of money back then, but you absolutely got *far* better service then than you do today. It's amazing to me how a network of thin copper lines that are so fragile was so reliable.

    • @thomaslanik7215
      @thomaslanik7215 6 років тому +6

      The landline phone system uses it's own power- independent from the national electrical grid. That is the big reason.

    • @jjdynomite5757
      @jjdynomite5757 6 років тому +11

      They used deep cycle batteries that were constantly charging to power the system. When the mains went down, the batteries kept it running until the charge went out, which usually never happened.
      There were times the lines would flood out and cause an 'off hook' on all the lines in the flooded trunks. There were even circuits that dropped lines when they got into that condition, and alerted someone at the CO. Today you're lucky to even find anyone at most small COs.

    • @robertcuminale1212
      @robertcuminale1212 6 років тому +6

      @@jjdynomite5757 That's because we ran generators to keep the batteries charged.

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home Рік тому +6

      AT&T built their buildings to high standards to withstand natural disasters. Communication equipment rooms dont have windows and there are big battery plants to keep the equipment working for at least 24 hours. Most sites also have auto start generators.

    • @Chris_at_Home
      @Chris_at_Home Рік тому

      @@jjdynomite5757I worked at a site where we had a 48v battery plant with each 2 volt cell weighing 675 lbs and had 1700AH capacity. I worked at another site where we had 7 battery plants.

  • @brianarbenz7206
    @brianarbenz7206 4 роки тому +6

    I used to work as a stringer journalist for Associated Press, and the portion around 25 minutes brought back memories of rushing stories in from the field by phone - but not of the crowning of the daffodil festival queen in Puyallup!

  • @drh4683
    @drh4683 12 років тому +22

    Its great you are taking the time to share such excellent history from your archives!

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 5 років тому +1

      I see you are also interested in technology from the past. 🤓

    • @clemflynn7067
      @clemflynn7067 Рік тому

      I agree. I love it as well. Thank you for sharing this information.

  • @toastecmo
    @toastecmo 3 роки тому +9

    When real hard working Americans prided in their work and production was in the US. Now its mostly overseas. Now it's all blowing up in out face. We need to recapture the spirit and grit of American manufacturing.

  • @am74343
    @am74343 11 років тому +18

    I love those humongous hard drives!!! Those big discs spinning!!!

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield 6 років тому +4

      I bet your cell phone has more storage capacity than that drive.

    • @jackdavis8992
      @jackdavis8992 4 роки тому +1

      @@1978garfield much. Much more. Hahahaha. Hard to believe but true.

    • @coreybabcock2023
      @coreybabcock2023 Рік тому

      They didn't have much dust protection

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Рік тому +1

      Tape drives, actually. Tape is still a pretty good medium for archival storage of old data. Of course you need a functioning tape machine to read it back someday.

    • @michaelterrell
      @michaelterrell 6 місяців тому +1

      That was used more as RAM than storage. Those early systems only held a few MB. A local steel mill had a Westinghouse computer that used a 40" drive to store 5MB to run the hot strip. It had a five MP, 480V three phase motor. It was finally retired in the mid '80s when all of the spare heads, parts and used drives had been purchased and run to their deaths.

  • @rexlex1736
    @rexlex1736 Рік тому +7

    I was an AT&T/Bell System employee for 25 years. December 31, 2023 will be the 40th anniversary of the official break up of the Bell System. At the time of its demise, the Bell System was 107 years old. Unfortunately, the company was forcefully dismantled by the US government.

  • @NipkowDisk
    @NipkowDisk 9 років тому +17

    It's great to see all of these archives showing the technology of our communications central nervous system, in an earlier era.
    On another note, it looks like Peter Marshall and Ray Bolger around the 23:35 mark or so...

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 5 років тому +2

      You are correct.

    • @jackdavis8992
      @jackdavis8992 4 роки тому +1

      Believe that's Gene Rayburn with Bolger. He did many things for NBC, WNBC am and TV and NBC Radio during the late 50s through the late 70s

    • @pata299
      @pata299 Місяць тому

      @@jackdavis8992 nope Peter Marshall

  • @whorton4
    @whorton4 6 років тому +10

    Ah, the good 'ol days, when all you needed around a train was:
    "I know every engineer on every train
    All of their children, and all of their names
    And every handout in every town
    And every lock that ain't locked, when no one's around."
    -Lyrics King of the Road.

  • @johnopalko5223
    @johnopalko5223 5 років тому +11

    I know things were a lot looser in 1967, but that guy firing up the diesel generators without hearing protection. Wow.

    • @calbob750
      @calbob750 3 роки тому +2

      I worked in a Central Office in Cleveland in the 70s. All the underground cable came into the building. A nearby gas station had leaking gasoline storage tanks that migrated into the CO basement. All the management and operators exited the building without notifying the technicians. Where’s OSHA when you need it.

    • @johnopalko5223
      @johnopalko5223 3 роки тому +2

      @@calbob750 Ouch! What, did they think the craft were expendable?

    • @michaelterrell
      @michaelterrell 6 місяців тому

      Our CO in Middletown Ohio not only had the diesel generator. they also had a farm tractor and a PTO driven generator as a secondary backup.

  • @mikemac2888
    @mikemac2888 8 років тому +5

    10:58 - they still do, but those are air-dry systems for buried fiber-optic. Neat. Everything done in this video - there's now an app for all of it.

  • @skeets6060
    @skeets6060 Рік тому +3

    I sure miss Ma Bell,, the best job I ever had, from PBX to microwave to long lines in Pittsburgh

  • @kjclark1963
    @kjclark1963 6 років тому +5

    What they fail to mention is that the TV show being produced at NBC with Peter Marshall and Ray Bolger was an episode of the weekly Bell Telephone Hour. This was season 8, episode 13, titled, "Music of the Movies."

    • @patbarron0
      @patbarron0 2 роки тому

      I probably should have looked at the comments first, before I spent about 20 minutes figuring that out... ;-) (I recognized Peter Marshall right away, but at first I thought Ray Bolger was actually Jack Klugman, and that kind of impeded my progress...).

    • @badcompany-w6s
      @badcompany-w6s Рік тому

      I thought that was Peter Marshall however I wasn't sure.

  • @marcfield582
    @marcfield582 8 років тому +47

    I only wish the would put this kind of effort into things today.

    • @williamkucharski2245
      @williamkucharski2245 8 років тому +12

      That's what the profits from running a monopoly bring.
      Do you pay $2/minute for long distance calls anymore? No? That lack of revenue has consequences.
      To be fair, it's also matching expectations; in the 1960s power companies used to proactively replace components; now they just wait for things to fail, because people expect power outages now and then.

    • @videosuperhighway7655
      @videosuperhighway7655 8 років тому +17

      The reason it cost 2 dollars a minute was the expense of the technology. Just one IBM 360 cost in the millions and you needed tons of them. The amount of employees needed to run the phone system was huge. Everything had to be engineered for reliability and tons of R&D involved, tons of work had to be done to continue to extend telephone service in the US. this is why it cost 2 dollars a minute. Just like a computer like an Apple IIe cost 2000 dollars and only had 64K of ram. Telephone was still growing back then. It took a lot of money to recoup the huge expense in building it.
      Also for long distance you needed these 4/6 gigahertz microwave towers and buildings filled with expensive electronics, waveguides, antennas the size of a truck etc.. every certain amount of miles. today a 4/6 gigahertz transmitter is smaller than the palm of your hand and the antenna a few inches wide. So these are a few reasons it cost 2 dollars a minute. not because of greed, because of the expense of the undertaking.

    • @billyboi57
      @billyboi57 8 років тому +14

      Long distance rates were high because some of that revenue was used to subsidize local telephone service. That is why the Bell System could apparently repair or replace telephone lines and equipment at not cost to the end consumer. At one point, the old AT&T or Ma Bell as she was called employed over one million people in different capacities.

    • @l.r.1891
      @l.r.1891 8 років тому +4

      Its not about expense technology itself. Its about phone call/total capacity/shared time ratio and maintenance ratio from which cost of phone call is calculated. Because spectral efectivity massively increased over the time with a new technology, prices decreased as well even you've had same or only a little bit lower maintenance ratio.
      You have expensive calls today as well. Satellite phone cost 2-4$/minute because capacity is very low and equipment is very expensive. It's not a rocket science.

    • @sillygoose635
      @sillygoose635 5 років тому

      still do

  • @johneygd
    @johneygd 8 років тому +4

    Whoooaah mind. Blowong those network & computersystems at the time, they were lightyears ahead.

  • @markcarbonaro6524
    @markcarbonaro6524 2 роки тому +3

    Back in the days when the Bell System strived for the five 9’s of reliability: “It will work 99.999% of the time”

  • @jimdandy7772
    @jimdandy7772 4 роки тому +7

    This was a time when men worked to build this country, the last 3 generations have taken everything apart piece by piece and sent it all over seas

    • @calbob750
      @calbob750 3 роки тому +2

      Someone decided that it was all about shareholder value. That’s why when you call for customer service you contact someone with a flip chart and no understanding of the English language.

    • @Janotes
      @Janotes 3 роки тому +1

      And the current generation has no drive at all..

    • @deepspacecow2644
      @deepspacecow2644 Рік тому

      And what about all the other tier ones that are around nowadays?

  • @wachter206
    @wachter206 4 роки тому +2

    7:20 Earliest real time package tracking. Now it takes 30 seconds on a smartphone. Crazy how far technology has come since MaBell’s time.

    • @ModMokkaMatti
      @ModMokkaMatti Рік тому

      Has it really come that far? Life is more screwed up than ever before.

  • @billyfulks5587
    @billyfulks5587 4 роки тому +11

    It’s scary to think that we don’t have such solid infrastructure today. Now, we have smaller and less committed communication companies (including the sad remnants of AT&T).

    • @mattnah8352
      @mattnah8352 2 роки тому +2

      Contact your congressman and get it back under a congressional regulated monopoly. As it should be.

  • @MrShobar
    @MrShobar 10 років тому +7

    The NY Central Railroad and Republic Steel both ended in bankruptcy.

    • @ModMokkaMatti
      @ModMokkaMatti 5 років тому +1

      And from what I understand, the "successor" Penn Central was a total hot mess. They should have known it would wind up that way, with the "mating worms" branding.

  • @dorothydotson7154
    @dorothydotson7154 10 років тому +7

    that's the year that Ma Bell "adopted" me. :)

  • @michaelgraham3396
    @michaelgraham3396 4 роки тому +2

    Incidentally (not entirely sure about this), the computer system looks a little like TOPS (Total Operations Processing System), which is still in use today in the UK! Correct me if I'm wrong. folks... Certainly the wagon numbers take the right format (two digit class and three digit identifier), together with the output looking kinda similar to the wagon enquiry samples I've seen.

    • @mobile_vic
      @mobile_vic 4 роки тому +2

      I believe that's TCS...which was another IBM product that was the follow-up to TOPS. I simply didn't believe the UK still runs TOPS...and then found out about TRUST, and the strange headcodes needed to book London Underground trains on national rail tracks. Fair play to them dragging the system kicking and screaming into the 21st century!

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 4 роки тому +1

      If it isn't broken, don't fix it, even if you can replace that whole computer with the integrated controller of an IO module.

  • @billmoran3812
    @billmoran3812 5 років тому +12

    The Bell system put untold millions of dollars into the system to make it as resilient and dependable as humanly possible. The only way that could be done was because they had a monopoly on service, and a guaranteed rate of financial return. This is why utilities were allowed monopolies and were regulated.
    Then in 1984, the idea of opening up the telephone system to multiple companies to allow competition resulted in the end of the regulated monopoly. Predictions of lower costs were made resulting from the completion for customers.
    Of course, costs did not go lower, but reliability suffered. Money that would have been spent on improving reliability went to marketing.
    Dumbest idea of the 20th century.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Рік тому +1

      Oh I don't know. I kind of like being able to buy my own phone. If Ma Bell were still around we'd all still be forced to use Western Electric wall units that we don't own and which come in three colors: black, beige, and pea green or whatever.

    • @kathleenking47
      @kathleenking47 Рік тому +1

      @@RCAvhstape they had pink/pastel blue/yellow princess phones which lit up...on ROTARY DIAL ☎️

    • @VideoArchiveGuy
      @VideoArchiveGuy Рік тому

      Plus all the pure science research Bell Labs did. Radio astronomy was born when Bell Labs researchers wondered what the interference was on their long distance lines.

    • @GaryL3803
      @GaryL3803 10 місяців тому

      @@RCAvhstape A little jaded don't you think? But the premise is true. Deregulation has improved the utility of "phones" dramatically. Who ever imagined cell phones as they exist now? However, the cell phone service is quite unreliable compared to AT&T back then.

    • @rcolon5432
      @rcolon5432 8 місяців тому

      Add to that, greed too to an obscene level that executives now enjoy, while the salaries of the workers that are the Blood, Sweat & Tears, are becoming a joke!

  • @yfs9035
    @yfs9035 3 роки тому +3

    Packet switching has both revolutionized and destroyed everything as we knew it

    • @yfs9035
      @yfs9035 3 роки тому +1

      I remember playing with POTS and home phones as a kid, that's when I found out that a ringing phone line is not one you want to be touching. Always been very interested in how "the phone rings". It was so amazing to me that the phone could connect you anywhere at any time. Even to places I have never been to or knew existed. It "carried my voice over electricity!" What an amazing time to be doing such a satisfying job as an installer, lineman, engineer or any of the "fun" jobs. Financial security, family and a sense of pride. None of this stupid modern idiocy deal with. Simplicity.

  • @mariogiresi6792
    @mariogiresi6792 4 роки тому +4

    0:42 Those forklift and warehouse jobs paid enough for a man to support his wife and child on. In 1967 my father had one job, a wife, four children and a mortgage and life easy breezy. And he was considered “lower middle class”! 😂

    • @GaryL3803
      @GaryL3803 10 місяців тому

      Indeed! I was exactly in the track of your father at that time, just a different job.

  • @danfarley1317
    @danfarley1317 5 років тому +19

    The Bell System was the most highly organized well engineered network in the world until the Department of Justice got their hands on them!

    • @thekaiser4333
      @thekaiser4333 4 роки тому +4

      Well, if they didn't, your phone and internet charges would be $3999,00 a month now.

    • @THEJET52
      @THEJET52 4 роки тому +1

      The Kaiser No, you’re very wrong... this was one of the most excellent, economical and service oriented company in existence. When asked “ how do you know breaking up this company will make it better”? The reply was “ We don’t, but we need to find out”!

    • @THEJET52
      @THEJET52 4 роки тому

      Our costs today are outrageous!

    • @mepperganfortas
      @mepperganfortas 4 роки тому +1

      @@THEJET52 you are correct, sir. My guess is it would probably be much better service and half the price of most of these plans today.

    • @brycmtthw
      @brycmtthw 4 роки тому

      lmao you realize that they caused their own breakup right?? 🤔🤔🤔 and competition is a good thing... if Bell was still together, you’d still have long distance over microwave relay that you couldn’t fucking hear, for our the ass cost. Competition and innovation from MCI and Sprint/United Telephone made them compete and implement newer technologies to keep up.

  • @viperch25
    @viperch25 3 роки тому +1

    at 11:03 if there is no problems there. then why send a man out there

  • @aodox
    @aodox 9 років тому +1

    19:30 -- Slow Scan TV signal, sounds like Martin 1

  • @JimmyDoresHairDye
    @JimmyDoresHairDye Рік тому

    The computer at 1:11...is that a actual functioning command line?

  • @AureliusR
    @AureliusR 2 роки тому +1

    Too bad the audio on this is so bad. Would be nice if someone could restore it properly!

  • @michaelterrell
    @michaelterrell 6 місяців тому

    I was stationed in Alaska when the tornadoes hit Xenia, Ohio. Our AP mews wire printed a story that 'A steel town in SW Ohio was destroyed'. There were two towns yb that area, In Hamilton and Middletown.
    I tried daily for almost a week to get a call to relatives in Middletown, only to hear a recording, telling mi that there were no available circuits. The AP did no followup story, so I had to worry about around a 100 family and friends back home. So much for their fabulous automatic route selection. Our military TV station had no acess to the military's secure phone lines, even though noth were carried on the military 'White Alice' microwave system. If it did, I could have contacted Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton to try to reachh home.

  • @marcfield6166
    @marcfield6166 7 років тому +9

    Just enough to make you miss the good old days when people actually gave a crap.

    • @PilotVBall
      @PilotVBall 5 років тому +2

      Marc Field The good ole days as long as you were white and a man. They weren’t so good for everyone else. Wake up!

    • @robozstarrr8930
      @robozstarrr8930 3 роки тому

      @@PilotVBall ...bullshit ....loser

  • @jaworskij
    @jaworskij 7 років тому +5

    They sure didn't use Technicolor on this documentary film. Eeeks! We're losing so much of our filmed heritage.
    I was 1 yo. when this film was made.

  • @bretthibbs6083
    @bretthibbs6083 5 років тому +3

    this is a cool video i've always loved telephone stuff I had cable tv and internet but now i have regular dsl high speed internet and sat tv

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie 10 років тому +9

    such excellent history , I would hope that most of these Systems are still in use , with replacement parts on stand by , this is a much better constructed System of Hardware and Software application than the Systems being built up today , if it works this good - Why move to a Less Stable System ? I would feel much Safer Knowing These were the Systems I Could Count Upon :) QC

    • @zo1dberg
      @zo1dberg 10 років тому +3

      Congratulations! You've been awarded today's "Dumbest Comment On The Internet For The Day!"
      View this video to collect your award - /watch?v=BROWqjuTM0g

    • @QuaaludeCharlie
      @QuaaludeCharlie 9 років тому +4

      I still stand by my comment :) QC

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 7 років тому +5

      I worked for AT&T for 25 years, and you are correct. Today's cell phone garbage is NOT reliable compared to the regulated switched network...just look at the stats.

    • @zo1dberg
      @zo1dberg 7 років тому

      "Today's cell phone garbage". Apples and oranges. Telephony (if you can still call it that) is far more complicated and customer requirements are far more demanding and diverse than they ever were.

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 7 років тому +4

      ***** True, but the basic function of telephony, voice communications, has been impaired greatly with cellular. All the "toys" (4G LTE ISP acces, SMS, etc.) are what people want, and pay big money for. They put up with lousy voice service because it's next-to-nothing cheap. Switch and facility capacity has been improved in recent years on cell, but if you want a side-by-side comparison using a wired phone, try calling over the PSN then try using VoIP...no comparison as to transmission quality, reliability and security. Also, with wired-to-wired voice, you have an entire battery of protective laws covering your security that do not exist for cell. Unfortunately, the "flat rate" calling plans on cell make it fairly impossible to make a profit in that business anymore, which is why we end up with scrappers like Frontier taking over VZ's wireline services...they want to start scrapping billions of dollars worth of copper, some of which has been in the ground and up in the air for 70 years..

  • @jvolstad
    @jvolstad Рік тому

    I love my ATT Fiber connection to the Internet.

  • @daniel-ino
    @daniel-ino 2 роки тому

    i looove these old wild documentaries. And especially this one because they didnt include the obliquious trumpet music

  • @nandanm3826
    @nandanm3826 5 років тому +1

    Nice & great.

  • @SkazaTV
    @SkazaTV 9 років тому +3

    Whats that intro music?

    • @jhrvta
      @jhrvta 8 років тому +1

      Yea... I sort of dig it... lol...

    • @whorton4
      @whorton4 6 років тому +1

      Reminds you of something you would have heard at the drive-in theatre during intermission in the 60's.

  • @thekaiser4333
    @thekaiser4333 4 роки тому +3

    Funny, they left out the bit with the NSA.

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 4 роки тому

      The NSA would just attach their equipment to the phone line if you were suspected of espionage. Actually, most bell system central offices had a test code you could dial that would temporarily disconnect your line so you could check for bugs.

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 3 роки тому +2

    The Unfailing Bell System (1967) - 10 years later... Jimmy Carter, "Hold my Billy Beer!"

  • @aquatrax123
    @aquatrax123 16 днів тому

    13:40 Shout out to Diamond City Radio!

  • @philipmcdonagh1094
    @philipmcdonagh1094 3 роки тому +1

    Almost every job in this doc is done by computer now.

  • @bmomjian
    @bmomjian Рік тому

    I think that is Jack Lord at 13:35.

  • @davenone7312
    @davenone7312 4 місяці тому

    Anybody recognize Peter Marshall as the guy in the studio dancing and singing? He became the host of Hollywood Squares game show.

    • @byrd56
      @byrd56 3 місяці тому

      23:47 - Peter, who lived to be 98 when he passed away on Aug 15, 2024, performed "Personality" (from the 1946 movie "Road to Utopia") alongside the legendary Ray Bolger in a March 1966 "Music from the Movies" episode of the "Bell Telephone Hour" on NBC. Of course, that was just months before Peter became the master of "The Hollywood Squares" when it premiered on NBC that October.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Рік тому +5

    Ma Bell, as a regulated monopoly, was more efficient than the fragmented communication systems that we have today. It provided dependable, well-coordinated service at an affordable cost, and its breakup was not necessarily in the best interests of the public.

    • @GaryL3803
      @GaryL3803 10 місяців тому +1

      For the time, it was remarkable, though I doubt that AT&T could have changed as rapidly if was left regulated.

  • @shockingguy
    @shockingguy 5 років тому +4

    It’s also very telling of the time when you look at anybody in these technical documentaries. You will be hard-pressed to find any people of color it was a very white world.

    • @AgentOffice
      @AgentOffice 5 років тому

      Black people barely began being able to go to college during the time

    • @Steevo69
      @Steevo69 Рік тому +1

      Isn’t it sad now that Asians are discriminated against for being successful?

    • @badcompany-w6s
      @badcompany-w6s Рік тому

      I guess you didn't see the guy in the hospital.

    • @ikonix360
      @ikonix360 Рік тому +2

      Figured someone would have to come in the comment section and make it about racism.

  • @cllewis1
    @cllewis1 9 років тому +1

    13:19 Fourth Wall much??

    • @adagueye8518
      @adagueye8518 9 років тому

      Sim

    • @mikemac2888
      @mikemac2888 8 років тому

      Doesn't count of you're operating another camera.

  • @uriituw
    @uriituw 5 років тому

    “…one of our men looking for trouble in the neighborhood… finds none here!”

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer30 6 років тому +2

    Isn't mid 60s a little old for having a baby?

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave 4 роки тому +1

    circuit switched network for reliability.

  • @jamesdavis5096
    @jamesdavis5096 5 років тому +2

    The audio was recorded on a potato

    • @jamesdavis5096
      @jamesdavis5096 5 років тому +1

      A high-fidelity potato

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 4 роки тому +1

      Or converted with a potato.

  • @badcompany-w6s
    @badcompany-w6s Рік тому

    That computer at the beginning. I think our city uses that for processing payroll.😅

  • @chriswilliams169
    @chriswilliams169 4 роки тому

    @12:48 'I can tell" wtf

  • @coreybabcock2023
    @coreybabcock2023 Рік тому

    Those hard drives had no dust protection

  • @brucel.6078
    @brucel.6078 5 років тому +1

    Back when America wasnt awesome. Not like today 😢🇺🇸

  • @solohechos1
    @solohechos1 8 років тому +1

    The google of the XX century.

  • @IamTedV
    @IamTedV 8 місяців тому

    Is it just me or is it ironic that the video about how good the Bell system was, the audio sounds like crap? 🤔

  • @markleneker9923
    @markleneker9923 3 роки тому

    "Telephone men looking for trouble."

  • @Microtonal_Cats
    @Microtonal_Cats 4 роки тому +1

    You'd think people with near-unlimited resources bragging about their tech prowess with audio technology could prodou7ce something with better audio. Even in 1967.
    #BAIAHC

  • @pressureworks
    @pressureworks 5 років тому +1

    5:48 Clark Kent.

  • @johngalt6929
    @johngalt6929 Рік тому

    The audio is unlistenable on this film.

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat Рік тому

    Remember when the US actually made things instead of shipping manufacturing jobs overseas for cheaper labor?

  • @dirkbrockmann1941
    @dirkbrockmann1941 2 роки тому

    Richtig geil die Technik damals 1++++++++++++❤️❤️❤️

  • @daniel-ino
    @daniel-ino 2 роки тому

    so many jobs thar were relatively simple but could feed families. What went wrong?

    • @deepspacecow2644
      @deepspacecow2644 Рік тому

      Cell towers and backbone networks still need maintaining. You just need an entry level cert and you can get to work maintaining the net.

    • @daniel-ino
      @daniel-ino Рік тому

      @@deepspacecow2644 yeah ? Could your dad do this work?

    • @deepspacecow2644
      @deepspacecow2644 Рік тому

      @@daniel-ino with job training yes. Just like any job.

    • @daniel-ino
      @daniel-ino Рік тому

      @@deepspacecow2644 also for people with severe anxiety of hights?

  • @scotty3034
    @scotty3034 4 роки тому

    Yo where the brothers at?

    • @mepperganfortas
      @mepperganfortas 4 роки тому

      Actually, AT&T heavily recruited minorities and women in the 70's and 80's and today.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer30 6 років тому +1

    Want to hear a teenager cry?
    Make them move to Green Belt, Maryland.

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 4 роки тому +1

      Why? Is there an old electromechanical CDO there?

    • @TechHowden
      @TechHowden 3 роки тому

      @@user2C47 lol

  • @scottdevaney3928
    @scottdevaney3928 9 місяців тому

    What time does it feels like it was better times back then and more reliable than now you can use 401 and get reliable information did Bell Labs push new technology Nicholas mistake not to leave AT&T as a monopoly

  • @AgentOffice
    @AgentOffice 5 років тому

    Good to feed telephone men

  • @edmctug8800
    @edmctug8800 4 роки тому +2

    No chinese junk pipe back then we made everything !!!!!

    • @deepspacecow2644
      @deepspacecow2644 Рік тому

      Corning still produces their fiber in the US. They are an industry leader, not sure what your talking about.

  • @edmctug8800
    @edmctug8800 4 роки тому

    Ah Great old detroit diesel generators for backup power !!!!

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s 4 роки тому

    Oh sure the could not fail but when they screwed up they really screwed up.

  • @georgeniebling6566
    @georgeniebling6566 Рік тому

    The Bell System .... a monopoly again ...

    • @ikonix360
      @ikonix360 Рік тому

      Which is what AT&T is trying to do, only an unregulated one this time.

  • @agy234
    @agy234 2 роки тому

    Republic and the pipe mill are long gone, along with all the jobs

  • @heatherpearson7083
    @heatherpearson7083 3 роки тому

    It's ok really

  • @sharedknowledge6640
    @sharedknowledge6640 4 роки тому +2

    AT&T isn’t even clever enough to produce and/or publish a video without grossly overloaded and distorted audio. This is hard to listen too.

  • @Mdfitri-jq6rb
    @Mdfitri-jq6rb 9 років тому +1

    i think this is sytem very at&t should be the militry that convey information me to my government thanks with this lesson

    • @ModMokkaMatti
      @ModMokkaMatti 5 років тому

      Don't forget, go to Kmart and buy some underwear before you watch The People's Court.

    • @user2C47
      @user2C47 4 роки тому

      You want the military to maintain the telephone network?

  • @KevlarCondom
    @KevlarCondom 3 місяці тому

    Lol. AT&T on strike in August 2024.

  • @8800081
    @8800081 5 років тому +1

    Need an additional 25 million on the pipeline, Oprah is firing up her barbecue. 🐖 🥩 🍔 🐔 🐟 🦌🐑🐐🐇 🦐 🦀
    Thank God those telephone lines work, I wouldn't want to miss a couple of gay guys bouncing around on the stage.