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Actually, I still have a clock radio...
5 Classic Pieces Of Tech That Will Remind Boomers Of Their Childhood
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RadioActive wrote:
Actually, I still have a clock radio...
5 Classic Pieces Of Tech That Will Remind Boomers Of Their Childhood
Me too, if it ain’t broke….
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Shorty Wave wrote:
RadioActive wrote:
Actually, I still have a clock radio...
5 Classic Pieces Of Tech That Will Remind Boomers Of Their Childhood
Me too, if it ain’t broke….
Ditto... an '05 GE model from the Real Canadian Superstore, and I still use it to this day, though the buttons for the alarm need a dose of contact cleaner. Party lines and transistor radios were a bit before my time, but some friends' families had console TVs, and my dad (from the boomer generation but not your stereotypical boomer) had a pretty big vinyl collection, part of which now lives at my office.
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Our first record player was a Seabreeze with detachable speakers. Very hi-tech for its time. My first transistor radio arrived for Christmas 1965. WBT and WBZ were my first DX catches. We never had a party line but when I moved to Hamilton to attend McMaster in 1972, my landlady did. I never owned a clock radio. And my family's first console tv was a 1961 Phillips 21" set. When the set was on the channel indicator box lit up. I thought we should have bought an Admiral like my grandparents had. Too expensive according to my dad.
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: )) ..
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I have several clock radios. But I only use them as a clock. Every clock radio I've ever seen has a garbage radio. When we're traveling I always take along a clock radio and a real radio. I lot of hotels have removed the clocks from their rooms. They say most guests prefer to use the clock in their phone.
So I teke along the clock radio to use as a clock and a real radio to listen to.
Last edited by turkeytop (Yesterday 8:35 pm)
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turkeytop wrote:
I have several clock radios. But I only use them as a clock. Every clock radio I've ever seen has a garbage radio. When we're traveling I always take along a clock radio and a real radio. I lot of hotels have removed the clocks from their rooms. They say most guests prefer to use the clock in their phone.
So I teke along the clock radio to use asa clock and a real radio to listen to.
You know, that is probably the reason why I have never owned a clock radio.
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Many modern radios have a built in alarm that turns on a station at a time of your choosing. They're not exactly clock radios, more like radios with a clock. They also come with a timer than can turn your radio off after a certain number of hours, so you can fall asleep and not worry about it being on all night.
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I miss the old mechanically-controlled 'flipper' clocks. So calming.