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In reply to the discussion: Adults Lose Skills to AI. Children Never Build Them. (Psychology Today, 3/22) [View all]erronis
(23,768 posts)22. Neither. I click on the receiver cradle multiple times.
If anyone remembers this.
Say I wanted to dial 4-1-1:
- 4 quick clicks in succession, pause
- 1 click, pause
- 1 click, pause.
And then there were the phone tone generators (blue boxes) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_box
Subculture
The widespread ability to blue box, once limited to just a few isolated individuals exploring the telephone network, developed into a subculture.[10][11] Famous phone phreaks such as "Captain Crunch", Mark Bernay, and Al Bernay used blue boxes to explore the various "hidden codes" that could not be dialled by a standard telephone.[citation needed]
Some of the more famous pranksters were Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, founders of Apple Computer.[13] On one occasion, Wozniak dialed Vatican City and identified himself as Henry Kissinger (imitating Kissinger's German accent) and asked to speak to the Pope (who was sleeping at the time).[14][13] Wozniak said in 1986:[15]
Jobs later told his biographer that if it had not been for Wozniak's blue boxes, "there wouldn't have been an Apple."[16]
The widespread ability to blue box, once limited to just a few isolated individuals exploring the telephone network, developed into a subculture.[10][11] Famous phone phreaks such as "Captain Crunch", Mark Bernay, and Al Bernay used blue boxes to explore the various "hidden codes" that could not be dialled by a standard telephone.[citation needed]
Some of the more famous pranksters were Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, founders of Apple Computer.[13] On one occasion, Wozniak dialed Vatican City and identified himself as Henry Kissinger (imitating Kissinger's German accent) and asked to speak to the Pope (who was sleeping at the time).[14][13] Wozniak said in 1986:[15]
I called only to explore the phone company as a system, to learn the codes and tricks. I'd talk to the London operator, and convince her I was a New York operator. When I called my parents and my friends, I paid. After six months I quit--I'd done everything that I could.
I was so pure. Now I realize others were not as pure, they were just trying to make money. But then I thought we were all pure.
I was so pure. Now I realize others were not as pure, they were just trying to make money. But then I thought we were all pure.
Jobs later told his biographer that if it had not been for Wozniak's blue boxes, "there wouldn't have been an Apple."[16]
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Adults Lose Skills to AI. Children Never Build Them. (Psychology Today, 3/22) [View all]
highplainsdem
Yesterday
OP
Yvw, Sheltie! There is so much pressure and hype to use AI from the AI industry, and now from the Trump regime.
highplainsdem
Yesterday
#4
Its similar to spell check, unless a person takes the effort to turn it off..
BlueWaveNeverEnd
9 hrs ago
#57
The risks, IMO, are a given and I will never embrace this dysfunctional garbage.
SheltieLover
Yesterday
#32
You're welcome! After seeing that editorial from the U of Pennsylvania student paper yesterday, reading
highplainsdem
Yesterday
#46
For what it's worth, I can't tell time on a sundial. Or use Stonehenge to schedule a harvest.
JustABozoOnThisBus
Yesterday
#18
The reason I was told in elementary school for learning cursive is because it is FASTER
progree
Yesterday
#24
I have the clacky electric portable typewriter with ribbon too. Sadly, no rotary dial phone,
progree
Yesterday
#45
Your first two sentences reveal the tenuous ground the cursive argument stands on.
Ilikepurple
Yesterday
#25
I think it would be interesting to hear your wives anecdotes, but you only mentioned analog clocks in your prior post.
Ilikepurple
Yesterday
#47
I have a similar background. I didn't use cursive until I started college.
Ilikepurple
3 hrs ago
#58
A.I. stands for Artificial Insemination. Same thing for AI except no long glove is used.
twodogsbarking
Yesterday
#10
Lol. For us it wasn't just the various caterpillars, stink bugs and other creepy crawlers,
mwmisses4289
Yesterday
#39
Today's parents don't get it because they weren't taught the basics in school
FakeNoose
Yesterday
#12
Actually, quite a number of the 20 and 30 somethings I know realized they were shortchanged.
mwmisses4289
Yesterday
#30
Big K & R. ALL parents must read this Psychology Today report if they want thinking children to control their futures.
ancianita
Yesterday
#17
IMHO AI should be highly regulated, by gov't policies, parents and ourselves.
Buddyzbuddy
Yesterday
#26
The article is about cognitive atrophy in adults and cognitive foreclosure in children, because of AI
highplainsdem
Yesterday
#49
In my line of work (copy-editing for publishers), AI's been in use for some years.
Emrys
22 hrs ago
#50