The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsTurns out, I am one cool octogenarian. So I am in the local grocery store and I drop my med. card in the parking lot.
A customer picked it up and turned it in to the office. When I get home, I look at my phone and find several calls from the supermarket but no message. I call them and the assistant manager tells me about the card - I can come an pick it up.
Me; "What was with the several phone calls and no voicemail message?"
She: "Oh, everybody liked your outgoing message so I had to call your phone to play it back so's everyone could hear it. It's cool, because none of us were born before 1964."
The Message: "If you are a lawyer or bill collector, you are hearing this message because I am deceased. Anyone else, you know what to do since you've been doing it since 1964."

Srkdqltr
(8,984 posts)
wishstar
(5,784 posts)Piqued my curiosity and I found this reference:
https://www.si.edu/object/nmah_1299443
"While telephone answering machines date to the early twentieth century, commercial units did not begin to enter the U.S. market until the 1960s. AT&T executives feared that users might cut back on telephone use if recording devices were widely adopted. The company sought to block the introduction of answering machines even while their engineers made significant technical advances in magnetic recording technology.
This model 100 Record-O-Phone by Robosonics was one of the early, commercially available answering machines. Introduced in 1963, these machines cost several hundred dollars each and were aimed at business customers. The unit used a reel of plastic recording tape to record incoming messages. The units cradle-arms were placed beneath the handset of a desk telephone and lifted the handset off the base in response to an incoming call. Since the unit is not electrically connected to the telephone, the user avoided sanction by the telephone company."
calimary
(88,007 posts)3Hotdogs
(14,643 posts)"It's your dime, don't waste it."
My boss overheard one of these ---- "Dime phone calls went out in the 60's."
Well, fuck you, Pete. I still answer unknown calls that way.
Yes, I'm 83 and I still do occasional light work for the guy. I don't need the $ but it's fun to stop in and see the old (but younger ) suits from time to time.
calimary
(88,007 posts)And a TERRIFIC message!