Submitted by norrisrw t3_11ql1r2 in OldSchoolCool
norrisrw
Submitted by norrisrw t3_10pfvz6 in OldSchoolCool
Submitted by norrisrw t3_yya9bn in photoshopbattles
Submitted by norrisrw t3_11ql1r2 in OldSchoolCool
Submitted by norrisrw t3_10pfvz6 in OldSchoolCool
Submitted by norrisrw t3_yya9bn in photoshopbattles
norrisrw OP t1_jbh976r wrote
Reply to A woman working for the phone company at her post as the "Time Lady", announcing the time live with each phone call that comes in, 1930s by norrisrw
This was, of course, in the days prior to the automated systems that were in use, beginning in the late-1940s. The automated systems would be synced to a clock, and they would play the appropriate time, followed by a tone.
One such system employed a series of looped tape cartridges (known in broadcasting as "carts") that would trip in sequence when an inaudible cue tone triggered the next tape in the deck. For example:
"At the tone, the time will be..." "Four..." "Forty-eight..." "And ten seconds." BEEP
I remember my father calling Time every Sunday evening, when it was time to wind up our clocks (My parents collected antique clocks). I still remember the phone number: (714)853-1212. It still works today, only now it includes the date and temperature, and it's sponsored, so you'll have to sit through an ad.