LIFE BEFORE INTERNET
Whether you think
life was easier back then, or better now, the Internet has created a sea change
in the way we live our lives. Let’s take a look at the way things were
before the Internet took over our lives.In the 1980s, the Internet didn’t
exist. Imagine, people walking around without iPhones glued to their hands.
There was no email, no texting, no Facebook. How did we ever survive? In 1995,
Netscape introduced the first Web browser, which enabled anybody with a
computer and Internet connection to “surf” the World Wide Web. Still, most
people didn’t have readily available Internet access in their homes until well
into the new millennium. Fast forward to today. Most of our parents, if not
grandparents, are now connected to the Internet via high-speed WiFi
connections. Things have changed so fast, it’s hard to remember what life was
like a mere 15-20 years ago.
Let’s take a look at
the way things were before the Internet became a part of our lives:
1. Apples were something
that grew on a tree. Amazon was a river in South America. And a tablet was the
pill form of an Advil or Tylenol.
2. Computers were
large clunky boxes relegated to libraries, offices and college computer labs.
Laptops didn’t come around until the 1990s. To save a document, you relied on a
floppy disk to do the job.
3. “Chatting” was
something you did with a friend over coffee.
4. To communicate
with friends and family who lived far away, you hand wrote letters and mailed
them at the post office.
5. To make a phone
call, you used a landline phone. You know, the kind that was attached to the
wall of your kitchen and used metal wire lines for transmission. If you were
out of the house, you had to find a payphone. Cell phone usage didn’t become
widespread until the 2000s.
6. To look up phone
numbers, you called 17 or used a phone book.
7. People would
actually answer the phone when you called, since voice mail and answering
machines were not around to “leave a message at the beep.”
8. Libraries were
filled with books and encyclopedias that you’d have to read when you were
writing a research paper. No “Googling” or searching the Web for answers.
9. Buying music
meant going to the record store and buying a record, CD or cassette tape and
playing it on your record player, Walkman or Boom Box. Going to the record
store to pick out a new album was a great way to spend a Saturday afternoon
with friends.
10. You used paper
maps to navigate your way on the roads. No GPS back then.
11. Parents couldn’t
track their kids with “Find My Phone” or other GPS cell phone-tracking apps.
(Thank God!)
12. If you needed
money, you had to walk into a bank and make a withdrawal. ATM use didn’t become
widespread until the late 1980s.
13. If you wanted to
talk to many friends at the same time, you had to be in the same room with
them. No instant messaging back then.
14. Parents picked
up their kids at a set time and location. If you needed a ride, you were there
waiting. None of the current, “I’ll text you when I need a ride, Mom.”
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